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The girl was born in April 2016 and is cared for at BB when she is only a few days old.
A few weeks later, the administrative court decided, with the support of the Youth Care Act (LVU), that the girl should be cared for and placed in a family home.
A few months before the girl’s second birthday in 2018, the biological parents want their son back and request that the mandatory care be stopped.
The Social Welfare Board advises against and the administrative court says no. The parents are appealing and in the spring of 2019, the compulsory care of the girl will cease through a ruling by the Jönköping Court of Appeal.
At the end of January this year, ten months after the biological parents regained custody, she is found dead in an apartment in the center of Norrköping.
The parents were arrested the same day.
The father dies in custody. The mother is charged in May with murder, two cases of extremely serious assault and violation of public order. The woman denies the crime.
The district court ruled in June that the mother had caused the girl’s death through negligence, that is, by not immediately calling medical personnel or taking her to hospital. At the same time, the court decided that he would undergo a forensic psychiatric examination.
The National Board of Forensic Medicine has stated in a statement that the woman did not suffer from a serious mental disorder at the time of the crime and that, therefore, there are no conditions to sentence her to forensic psychiatric care.
In August, the Norrköping District Court sentenced the mother to one year and nine months in prison for seriously causing the death of another person.
Both the mother and the prosecutor have appealed the verdict.
On October 13, the Swedish Health and Care Inspectorate, Ivo, strongly criticizes the handling of the case by the social services committee. In its decision, Ivo writes that the Norrköping social welfare committee has not assumed its ultimate responsibility for the boy and has not provided the girl with the protection and support to which she was entitled.
Source: The Courts, Ivo