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Suspected of being behind several murders: Helicopter release ordered
Of: Susanna nygren
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Helicopters and synchronized clocks would be used to free the 29-year-old Swede from Spanish custody.
Police suspect this after finding handwritten letters the man is said to have written.
– It’s almost like a kind of action movie, says prosecutor Lisa Åberg.
A lengthy trial is currently underway at the Malmö District Court, where a 29-year-old man has been charged, among other things, with aggravated money laundering and two incitement to murder cases. One murder took place in Ramelsväg in March 2017 and the other in Docentgatan in February 2018.
Photo: Andreas Hillergren
Police on the scene after the murder in Ramelsväg.
Police suspect the man has ordered several murders in Malmö and that a murderous patrol of at least a handful of people has been involved.
The 29-year-old was already wanted internationally in 2018. He was arrested in Spain in December 2019 and detained there before being handed over to Sweden.
After the arrest, the Spanish police searched the house in an apartment in Barcelona, with which the 29-year-old was connected. There they found several handwritten letters that police believe the man sent from prison.
– I’m saying he’s the one who wrote the letters. It’s completely clear, says prosecutor Lisa Åberg, who has one of the charges against the man.
Photo: Police
The letter the police found.
It should be released by helicopter.
The letter contains a detailed description of how a person wants to be exempted: by helicopter. You should land or throw a rope. If someone tries to prevent the helicopter from landing, the author of the letter suggests that they bring a bomb ladder, made of a shoebox and cables, which can be used as a threat.
The bells need to be timed so the man knows when he will be on the boardwalk. This is how it is expressed:
“It should go fast. Land (or throw the rope). Fly over the mountain for two minutes. Leave me there.”
The helicopter will then continue to Valencia so that the police believe that this is where it fled. In the mountain, there will be a hideout with food for two weeks so that you can “duck” there for a while.
If it does not work with a helicopter, it is suggested in the letters that he hide in a transport cart that goes to the prisoner workshop. There you have to threaten a guard to open the door. Outside the prison, wait for a fast car.
Photo: KRISTER HANSSON
The task force raided Docentgatan after the fatal shooting on February 2, 2018.
Thought Drug Guards
The man also asks someone to bring drugs that he can put in the guards’ glasses.
Those who help with the exemption will be rewarded. There are big plans for the future:
“We are making history in Spain. Think of the whole world, people will want to work with us.”
The letters also include an appeal that convicted murderer Ahmad Jawad, sentenced to 18 years in prison for the murder on Ramel’s Road, should change his story to protect the author of the letter.
He also suggests that a fog curtain be put up to mislead the police. Have friends say that they know several others who have the same nickname as the author of the letter and point to a completely different person.
A fake ID card was found
The letters have been analyzed by the National Forensic Center. He claims that some of the letters are written in a different handwriting. Prosecutor Lisa Åberg believes that the 29-year-old could have asked someone else to write him that letter, but it is he who is behind it.
– I mean that it is he who has given instructions for it to be written. These are his words, and depending on the content, he is behind the lyrics, says Lisa Åberg.
Police found fingerprints of several people in the apartment and a false ID believed to have been used by the 29-year-old.
The trial against the man takes place in the security room of the Court Center in Malmö. There, all exemption attempts have been taken into account.
– You have taken into account the knowledge you have about him when you have looked at security. The hearing is held at the Legal Center and then there is no transportation from the jail but you enter through the sewers. In my opinion, it is very difficult to free someone in such conditions, says Lisa Åberg.
Aftonbladet has reached out to the 29-year-old’s attorney for comment.
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