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CRIME

How Malmö got its gang shootings under control

A big increase in police presence and the implementation of a gang violence strategy developed in the US has been followed by a dramatic reduction in the number of shootings in Malmö. Rolf Landgren, the Malmö police commissioner leading the project, tells The Local how it was done.

How Malmö got its gang shootings under control
Police commissioner Rolf Landgren at a meeting in February updating on the Sluta Skjuta strategy. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT
In October 2018, fed up with years of shootings and explosions connected with the city's gangs, Malmö's police force launched a new strategy based on the Group Violence Intervention (GVI) technique pioneered in US cities such as Boston, Baltimore and Minneapolis. 
 
The Ceasefire or Sluta Skjut project involved holding a succession of 'call-ins' where known or suspected gang members attend meetings with police, social workers, civil society, the family of gun-crime victims, and others.
 
They are then offered help leaving gang life and warned that if they continue to engage in gun crime, they risk being the subject of intense focus of the police and other authorities.
 
So far this year, Malmö has seen just nine shootings, down from 34 last year, 47 in 2018 and 65 in 2017. 
 
“It's fair to say that the results we see so far are positive, but it's too early to say that it's just because of Sluta Skjut,” Rolf Landgren, who took over as head of the project earlier this year, told The Local. 
 
Both Malmö's police and local authorities are still awaiting the results of the official appraisal of the pilot scheme, which is being led by academics at Malmö University. 
 
Nonetheless, Landgren said that local police had notched up successes, with about ten “really hardcore types” within Malmö's crime gangs agreeing to be “relocated to other parts of Sweden, where they are trying then to start a new life”. 
 
Over the last six months, meanwhile, he estimated that members of the three main gangs had together been sentenced to a combined 30 years in prison. 
 

Police at a shooting in the Hyllie part of Malmö in March 2020. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT
 
A year after Sluta Skjut was launched, Sweden's national police in November 2019 launched Operation Rimfrost (Operation Hoarfrost), which saw police redeployed to the Southern Region around Malmö to help carry out a series of major operations. 
 
“I wouldn't say that these two elements are in any opposition to one another,” Landgren said. “On the contrary. Sluta Skjut is a strategy, and you can have ever so fancy strategies, but if you don't back them with resources, manpower, and so forth, it won't fly.” 
 
“Rimfrost has been very, very important when it comes to fulfilling and implementing this strategy, because it has added policing resources to Malmö.” 
 
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Since October, Malmö police have called 25 suspected gang criminals into so-called 'call-ins', and held 49 one-on-one 'custom notifications' with 44 individual gang members. 
 
“We have have a call-in, where we also invite civil society and basically, let these violent groups know, 'we're fed up with what you're doing here in the city, and we're fed up with being frightened',” Landgren explained. 
 
“We tell these individuals, as messengers for different violent groups, 'look, we don't want you to be killed, and we don't want you to kill anybody', and we are going to do anything within our powers to make that happen.” 
 
Controversially, the technique involves stretching police powers to the limits of legality to put key individuals under pressure. 
 
The 30-year-old suspected leader of one gang had his car stopped and searched so many times that he filed a complaint of police harassment to Sweden's Justice Ombudsman. 
 
“We basically searched him and his car for 'preventive measures', which the legislation – we claim and argue, gives us permission to do when we have a reason to believe that there will be any type of severe illegal violence,” Landgren explained. 
 
“Normally the legislation is meant to deal with football hooligans and high-risk demonstrations and so on, so that maybe was the most more controversial part.” 
 
While the man's car – a bullet-proof Peugeot – was being searched, police gradually uncovered enough evidence against him for him to be sentenced to five and a half years in prison, a sentence he has since appealed. 
 

A shooting in the Rosengård part of Malmö in August 2020. Photo: Andreas Hillergren/TT
 
Landgren said that as well as focusing police efforts on the “few hundred” people involved in gang crime in Malmö, Sluta Skjut had also involved a shift in focus from controlling the narcotics trade to reducing gang violence.
 
“I've been a cop for more than 30 years and in Sweden, narcotics has always been top priority,” he explained. 
 
“The fundamental shift here is that now the guiding star for us is that we run after groups that are dealing with illegal violence to solve their conflicts or to dominate different parts of the city,” he said. 
 
“Of course, narcotics is still important and we do not accept so to say that there are serious criminal offences related to drugs. Absolutely not. But that's not the guiding star.” 
 
Landgren acknowledged that it might seem excessive for a city in relatively peaceful Sweden to look to gang-ridden US cities for policing techniques. 
 
“Landgren said it had taken years of deadly violence before Malmö's police had begun to consider that GVI – developed by the US criminologist David Kennedy for Boston during the peak of its gun violence in the 1990s – might be appropriate in Sweden.
 
“It was a pretty big step, but sometimes you've got to understand that you're at the bottom of the league table and play from there, and clearly, we had a tremendous problem here in 2016 and 2017,” he said. “We had figures way, way higher than we had ever seen before, and then you got to face it. We needed to break that spiral.”
 
Now he said, police in other districts in Sweden with similar problems, such as the suburbs of Sweden, or Norrköping and Uppsala, were interested in learning from Malmö's experience, with police chiefs from several Stockholm districts visiting Malmö on a fact-finding mission in March. 
 
“They reacted very positively and said they would look into the evaluation with great interest when it is ready towards the end of the year,” he said.
 
For now, Malmö's police authorities are waiting to see if the last year's reduction in shootings and explosions can be repeated in coming years, and also whether the GVI project will be continued. 
 
“I shouldn't preempt what the outcome will be with the evaluations, but if the evaluation is anywhere near as good as how it's perceived here, there will, of course, be a more permanent structure here when we come into 2021.”

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POLICE

Swedish police leaks scandal: How gang criminals got hold of sensitive information

A new report in Dagens Nyheter has revealed over 514 suspected leaks of sensitive information from at least 30 members of the police force to criminals since 2018. Here's what we know so far.

Swedish police leaks scandal: How gang criminals got hold of sensitive information

What’s happened?

According to an investigative report by newspaper Dagens Nyheter (DN), multiple gang members have infiltrated the police force by, for example, dating police employees, or using family connections to gain access to sensitive information about ongoing cases.

The first article in DN’s series focuses on a woman the newspaper calls Elin, who met a man, Jonas (not his real name), on a dating app when she had one year left of her police education. She falls in love, but his only goal with the relationship is to get a source within the police force which he can use for access to secret information.

Over the course of four years until she was caught, she made multiple illegal searches in the police register for Jonas, his associates and enemies, as well as providing him with information on ongoing investigations against him.

Other cases investigated by the newspaper include a border guard who sold classified information to gangs, a police officer who leaked information to what DN describes as “one of Sweden’s most notorious criminals” and an investigator who was dating a man she was investigating, who she shared screenshots of sensitive information with.

In another case, the police received a tip-off that information was being leaked to the Hells Angels motorcycle gang. It was discovered that a group of five alarm operators had made an unusually high number of searches for members of the Hells Angels, who were later discovered to have connections with the gang that they had lied about during their background checks.

What have the consequences of these leaks been?

In some cases, the leaks preceded revenge attacks on enemies of the gang member involved in the relationship. In other cases, the gang members’ enemies disappeared or were murdered.

Some of the people from the police force involved in the leaks were sentenced to fines for illegal data access or breaches of professional secrecy, while the evidence against others was not sufficient to prosecute. 

At least 30 employees had for different reasons been considered “security risks” and either resigned or were forced to quit, the newspaper reported, with over 514 suspected leaks taking place from police to criminals since 2018.

How do criminals find police officers?

According to DN, they look for things that can be used as blackmail, like police officers who buy drugs, or set “honey traps”, like the one used against Elin, where they meet police officers or students on dating apps and start a relationship.

“You take Tinder, for example, and set your search radius so the police school is in the centre. When you get a match, it’s easy to check if it’s a student, through class lists or how they present themselves on social media. They’re proud of their line of work,” Jonas told DN.

They might also use their family connections to put pressure on relatives who work in the police force.

Why is this important?

It’s important because Sweden has seen a rise in gang-related violence in recent years, with a surge in shootings and bombings as gangs fight for control over different drug markets.

Swedes also have a high level of trust in the police force – 72 percent according to a 2024 study by Medieakademin, topping the list of state authorities, with a higher level of trust than universities, healthcare, the courts and even the Swedish church. This was five percent higher than in 2023.

Although the vast majority of police officers do not leak information to criminal networks, Sweden does not have a history of organised crime infiltrating the police force, so officials are keeping a close eye on these leaks to make sure they don’t become more common.

On April 29th, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson told TT newswire that the leaks were “very serious”, potentially putting trust in the police force at risk.

“There are many great risks and one is that trust in police declines, that people get the idea that mafia-like methods are used to infiltrate law enforcement,” he said, before adding that he was unable to say whether it constituted a threat to national security or not purely based on the initial DN article.

“But the mere suspicion of these types of connections are damaging,” he told the newswire.

What happens now?

Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer told DN that he planned to call a meeting with police leadership about the reports, which he described as “extremely serious”.

“[At that meeting] we will consider the need for further measures,” he said.

“Leaking sensitive information to criminals is against the law and can have very damaging consequences for the work of the police force,” Strömmer told DN, adding that it could undermine trust in the police and “damage democracy”.

Last summer, the government increased the penalty for breaching professional secrecy, and a special investigator was tasked with looking at a potential reform of the rules on corruption and professional misconduct in February – the Crime Prevention Council is also involved in that investigation, where it has been asked to provide information on how gangs use government employees.

“Protecting the integrity of the justice system against infiltration and other security threats is a central part of the new national strategy against organised crime that the government decided on earlier this year, and it is given the highest priority in our assignments to the authorities,” Strömmer told the newspaper.

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