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CRIME

Counterfeiting ring exposed in Stockholm

Police near Stockholm have broken up a major counterfeiting ring specializing in US dollars and euros.

Counterfeiting ring exposed in Stockholm

Following several months of surveillance, police on Tuesday arrested a 30-year-old man suspected of being the operation’s ring leader, according to the Dagens Nyheter (DN) newspaper.

The arrest comes days after police confiscated counterfeit bills worth “millions” in Swedish kronor during a raid on a site in Märsta north of Stockholm.

Five other men with criminal backgrounds are also in custody, one of whom was found to have a sizeable cache of weapons when police apprehended him.

Police launched an investigation after receiving several reports of false bills circulating in Sweden last autumn.

“We have found money from the same source in circulation in society,” said public prosecutor Gunnar Fjaestad, who is leading the investigation, to DN.

Police are still unsure exactly where the bills may have been produced, however.

The suspected ring leader is a known figure to Scandinavian law enforcement, having been previously convicted of document forgery.

He was also one of four people arrested in Denmark several years ago for trying to sell a Rembrandt painting from Stockholm’s National Museum several years earlier.

The Supreme Court eventually had the 30-year-old and several other accomplices acquitted, citing methods used by the Swedish and American law enforcement to trap the man that were not allowed.

CRIME

Man shot dead in southern Stockholm in early hours of Monday

A man was shot dead on Monday morning in the Bredäng suburb, just a few hours after another shooting in southern Stockholm.

Man shot dead in southern Stockholm in early hours of Monday

Police were called out to the scene at around 5.30am, after a witness heard gunshots and saw a person on the ground.

The man, aged around 40, was taken to hospital but died from his injuries.

“Police are right now looking for a perpetrator or perpetrators,” police said in a statement, adding that they were investigating. “We will use police search dogs in our work and other investigative measures such as door knocking and interrogations are ongoing.”

Late on Sunday, another man was injured in a shooting in Flemingsberg, south of Stockholm. 

The state of his injuries was not immediately known and no arrests had been reported by the time of publication.

According to unconfirmed reports to the Aftonbladet tabloid, the man, aged around 60, was shot through the door after the shooter knocked on the door and said he had a food delivery.

He was, according to Aftonbladet, not believed to have been the intended victim, but a relative of his was the target of another recent shooting.

Police confirmed the shooting had happened “in connection to an apartment” when asked by the TT news agency.

It was not known on Monday morning whether the two incidents were connected.

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