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The couple’s special relationship had lasted just over ten years when the 63-year-old man raised the alarm to SOS one night in April.
He was actually going upstairs to go to the bathroom, when he discovered his special resident lifeless on the couch. She was silent as lightning, she wasn’t breathing, and she was pale and cold.
“She is not reacting. I have … and she is also freezing,” said the 63-year-old woman to the SOS telephone operator.
The woman was already dead in the house; When she was taken to the hospital, the cause of death was assumed to be cardiac arrest. Just four days later, the police got properly involved. Later, a preliminary autopsy report showed that there were clear signs of external violence on the woman’s body.
On April 24, the 63-year-old man was arrested. Four days later, he was arrested, for probable cause, on suspicion of murder.
Accused of assault and illegal threats
Just a month before the woman was found dead, the couple found themselves embroiled in a completely different criminal process. By then, the 63-year-old had beaten and threatened his special resident; He was sentenced to probation for assault and unlawful threats.
In its verdict against the man, the Ystad District Court stated that there were strong reasons for sentencing him to prison. That it became probation instead was because the man stated that he was willing to address his alcohol problems.
He then said that he had realized that he was using alcohol to relieve a great deal of pain.
“With some hesitation, the district court determines that therefore there are special reasons for determining the penalty for XXX probation rather than incarceration,” the Ystad District Court stated in its ruling.
The probation service was combined with a regulation on the treatment of alcohol abuse and violence in close relationships.
He died of strangulation
In her lawsuit against the 63-year-old, ward prosecutor Emma Ohlsson writes that the man took the life of his special resident with “extensive violence” that included beatings, kicking and strangulation.
“The violence has caused injuries to the plaintiffs in the form of skin abrasions, contusions, subcutaneous hemorrhages and hemorrhages. The plaintiffs have died as a result of the violence of the strangulation, ”writes the prosecutor.
According to a close relative of the woman, she was in “very good condition” at the time of her death. This is because he recently had an operation; a few weeks later, he would have another operation.
But when police investigators searched the woman’s Ystad apartment after the alleged murder, several notes were found describing a dismal existence and where the author of the note described concern, in part due to his poor vision.
On a coffee filter it was written that the author of the note should request a restraining order. Another described how the Lappish author was used as money and as a home.
Denies the accusations
At the same time, the 63-year-old man denies the criminal charges.
He says in police questioning that Särbon may have received the wounds around her neck in relation to himself trying to shake her alive, when he discovered her lifeless on the couch.
When asked how long he kept his special resident around his neck, he said:
– Yes, it wasn’t more than a couple of minutes I guess but maybe two or three times, I don’t know.
At the same time, they have secured a number of clues in the 63-year-old’s own home that speak against his story. Crime investigators have found, among other things, traces of blood on carpets and pillows, blood belonging to both the 63-year-old man and the woman.
A few days after the woman’s death, the 63-year-old also tried to withdraw money with her ATM card in the center of Ystad.
The 63-year-old man is charged with murder for the first time. Alternatively, criminal suspicion applies to aggravated assault and aggravated cause of death of another.