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LISA HOLM MURDER

CRIME

Suspect in teen murder told family to tell lies

The 35-year-old key suspect in the Lisa Holm murder case allegedly told his brother and wife to lie to police about his whereabouts on the day the teenager was killed, Swedish media reported on Saturday.

Suspect in teen murder told family to tell lies
Prosecutors said Holm had been hanged in a barn near where she worked. Photo: TT

According to the younger brother, the suspect went out on Sunday afternoon and returned home about half an hour later, changing his clothes and putting them in the washing machine. Both he and the wife found that strange, since the man usually washed his clothes on Saturdays, the man told Sweden's Aftonbladet newspaper.

Investigators learned of this during an interrogation in mid-June, the Swedish tabloid reported, shortly after 17-year-old Lisa Holm's body was discovered following one of the most high profile missing person cases in the country in years.

Days later, the three were at home when they saw that police were in the vicinity. The brother heard the wife say to her husband that the police might think he was involved in the murder because of his dirty clothes on that day and the washing. The suspect reacted angrily.

“He said in a crystal clear way that we should not tell anyone about that. He didn’t threaten us, but he said we shouldn’t be stupid and tell the police anything,” the brother told investigators.

During the same conversation, the suspect told his wife and brother they should tell the police that he was home at 6pm on the Sunday Lisa Holm disappeared.

Sexual motive

On Friday, prosecutors said the teenager’s murder was sexually motivated, although on her body there were no traces of a direct sexual assault.

Prosecutors at a press conference in Skövde said Holm had been hanged in a barn close to the café in Kinnekulle where she had worked, alleging that the suspect then moved her body to the location where she was found. This is despite the fact that no traces from Holm’s body were found in the suspect’s car.

The autopsy found that the 17-year-old had not been assaulted although her body was partially unclothed when she was found. The girl’s mouth had been taped shut.

“As we see it, any other motive than a sexual one is hard to imagine,” Deputy Prosecutor Lars-Göran Wennerholm said.

A woman who was jogging in the area several days before Holm disappeared told police that she had been approached by a man asking for directions. He insisted she get in his car but she refused. She later identified the murder suspect as the man who had spoken to her.

The 35-year-old has denied any connection to the crime, although his blood was found on Holm’s coat and on a piece of rope. Traces of his semen were found in the barn.

The suspect attracted police attention when it was discovered he had tried to discourage the group Missing People from combing the area for Holm after her disappearance, saying it had already been searched. 

The suspect’s younger brother and wife were initially suspected of involvement in the crime, but that investigation was later dropped. Both have said they do not want to be called as witnesses in the trial, which will start on Wednesday. 

STRIKES

Swedish appeals court throws out Tesla licence plate complaint

A Swedish appeals court rejected Tesla's attempt to force the Transport Agency to provide them with licence plates during an ongoing strike.

Swedish appeals court throws out Tesla licence plate complaint

The Göta Court of Appeal upheld a decision by the district court to throw out a request by US car manufacturer Tesla to force the Swedish Transport Agency to provide them with licence plates, on the grounds that a general court does not have jurisdiction in this case.

The district court and court of appeal argued that Tesla should instead have taken its complaint to an administrative court (förvaltningsdomstol) rather than a general court (allmän domstol).

According to the rules regulating the Transport Agency’s role in issuing licence plates in Sweden, their decisions should be appealed to an administrative court – a separate part of the court system which tries cases involving a Swedish public authority, rather than criminal cases or disputes between individuals which are tried by the general courts.

The dispute arose after postal service Postnord, in solidarity with a major strike by the Swedish metalworkers’ union, refused to deliver licence plates to Tesla, and the Transport Agency argued it wasn’t their responsibility to get the plates to Tesla in some other way.

The strike against Tesla has been going on for almost seven months.

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