In the ongoing Rönninge murder investigation, where a 26-year-old confessed to killing and dismembering a 25-year-old woman missing since Boxing Day, new details emerge on the suspect's violent history. Criminologist Leif GW Persson warned in 2020 about the high recidivism risk after the then-19-year-old's conviction for attempted child murder and child pornography crimes.
Following the discovery of the woman's body and the suspect's arrest in a nearby forest—as previously reported—the investigation revealed DNA links and body parts burial attempts. The 26-year-old immediately confessed.
The suspect's background is alarming. Convicted in 2020 at age 19 of attempted murder for pushing a 10-year-old girl into a car, plus gross child pornography possession (thousands of images), searches for 'knock someone unconscious' and 'rape drug', and images of dead naked women. Sentenced to two years and four months.
Prison stints at Kristianstad and Salberga involved violence, threats like 'pricka' (shooting) staff, and a major brawl leading to isolation. Permissions for release were denied due to recidivism risks.
Leif GW Persson, on TV4's 'Brottsjournalen' in 2020, stated: 'Such people have a very high recidivism rate.' He advocated psychiatric care for longer confinement: 'You never release someone if there's significant risk of new crimes. They missed that.'
Post-release, multiple name changes (now a female name), protected data, brief truck driver training and job in 2023. Activist Sara Nilsson warned publicly in 2021: 'He is completely life-threatening.'
In Rönninge, a memorial of flowers and candles grows. Friends grieve: 'It could have happened to anyone.' Salem offers crisis support amid community shock.