Forensic institute questions Katja Nyberg's cocaine explanation

Swedish MP Katja Nyberg denies taking cocaine, attributing residues in her blood to unclear metabolites. The National Board of Forensic Medicine rejects this, stating that such byproducts only form after cocaine use. The incident stems from a police stop during the Christmas holiday that led to her driving license being revoked.

Swedish Member of Parliament Katja Nyberg, a former Sweden Democrat, was stopped by police during the Christmas holiday. Traces of narcotics were found in her blood, leading to the revocation of her driving license, as previously reported by Aftonbladet.

In an interview with the newspaper Kvartal, Nyberg maintains that she did not take cocaine. She attributes the findings to metabolites—byproducts from a breakdown process in the body—and cannot explain their presence. “I have thought about it a lot,” she says in the podcast.

The National Board of Forensic Medicine disputes this explanation. Press officer Jimmy Blomqvist Larsson tells Dagens Nyheter that cocaine breaks down into the metabolite benzoylecgonine, which cannot form without prior cocaine ingestion. “You cannot get that without having had cocaine in you before,” he says. Blomqvist Larsson notes that law enforcement uses such traces to detect cocaine use: “If you don't find cocaine but find this instead, then there has been cocaine in the body.”

Nyberg has previously stated that she had no active substance in her system. The authority emphasizes that the byproduct cannot arise randomly.

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Illustration of Brattås farm double murder crime scene from 2005 with DNA arrest overlay.
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Man held for Brattås double murder from 2005

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A man in his mid-40s has been remanded in custody on probable cause for the unsolved double murder at a farm in Brattås outside Härnösand in the summer of 2005. The arrest was enabled by DNA-based genealogy research following a new law change last year. Prosecutor Hanna Flordal confirms the man's DNA matches the trace from the crime scene.

Prosecutor Emma Häggström has closed the probe into the suspected poisoning of four employees at Akademiska sjukhuset in Uppsala last autumn, clearing a previously detained colleague of suspicion. The hospital regrets the outcome but respects the decision.

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A senior police officer has told South Africa's Madlanga Commission of Inquiry that R55 million worth of cocaine disappeared from a forensic science laboratory after being seized in Johannesburg in 2021.

Falu District Court has sentenced seven people for involvement in organized drug trafficking. A man in his thirties from southern Sweden is viewed as the leader and receives over four years in prison plus deportation.

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