Professor Leif GW Persson angrily surveys pile of dumped apples at his Elghammar summer house, amid police report controversy.
Professor Leif GW Persson angrily surveys pile of dumped apples at his Elghammar summer house, amid police report controversy.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

Leif GW Persson plans report after apple dumping at summer house

Larawang ginawa ng AI

Criminologist professor Leif GW Persson believes the apple dumping at his summer house in Elghammar constitutes several crimes and plans to report SVT to the police. Free speech expert Nils Funcke sees it as a fun move and questions Persson's reaction. The incident ties to a recently sentenced activist whom Persson has supported.

Criminologist professor Leif GW Persson has reacted strongly to apples being dumped outside his summer house in Elghammar, Sörmland. According to him, the act constitutes gross unlawful entry, trespassing, property damage, and unlawful threat. “It will of course be reported to the police. I am absolutely convinced that it will lead to convictions,” Persson tells TV4 Nyheterna. He says the incident scared one of his daughters and a grandchild, and points to SVT as responsible after a neighbor saw an SVT van in the area. In Friday's episode of the SVT program “Svenska nyheter,” it is revealed that the production team was in Elghammar and dumped a truckload of apples.

The incident connects to earlier actions against ministers. In January, apples with painted Hitler faces were placed at migration minister Johan Forssell's home, and outside aid minister Benjamin Dousa's residence, a doll depicting an IS warrior with a severed head and a knife was set up. Activist Andreas Klominek, linked to Rojavakommittéerna supporting the Kurdish freedom movement, was sentenced on Friday to a conditional sentence for harassment against Forssell and unlawful threat against Dousa. The purpose was to protest the government's increased aid to Syria, which the group claims supports persecution of Kurds.

Persson has expressed support for Klominek and laughed about the action against Forssell: “What does this terrible crime consist of? In Forssell's case, he painted apples with a Hitler mustache and placed them in his area.” He has also promised to pay Klominek's 1,000 SEK fee to the Crime Victim Fund.

Free speech expert Nils Funcke thinks Persson is overreacting. “If there's nothing else associated with this, he should take it with a smile,” Funcke says. He describes the apple dumping as “a bit of a fun move” and questions if it is criminal, assuming no unknown circumstances. Funcke has previously argued that the actions against the ministers fall within free speech and criticized the sentence against Klominek as weakly reasoned, with a risk of chilling effect on individuals' expression.

In Gothenburg, a similar action by Rojavakommittéerna – a basket with red-painted bills outside the Moderates' party office – did not lead to charges. Democracy police officer Jan Bäckström believes politicians have lowered the bar for activism and should tolerate more criticism within the bounds of free speech.

Ano ang sinasabi ng mga tao

Discussions on X largely mock Leif GW Persson's reaction to apples dumped at his summer house, accusing him of hypocrisy since he supported a similar activist stunt with Hitler-painted apples at a minister's home. Posters question his certainty blaming SVT without evidence and highlight irony in his threat to report crimes like trespassing and threats. Neutral reports also circulate the news.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

International law experts debate critically as Swedish PM and deputy PM are shown downplaying attacks on Iran, symbolizing foreign policy shift.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

Experts criticize government for downplaying international law

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI

Four international law experts write in DN Debatt that the Swedish government is downplaying international law by dismissing the legality of US and Israeli attacks on Iran as a 'seminariefråga'. They refer to statements by Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson and Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch. The experts warn of a departure from Sweden's traditional foreign policy line.

Sweden's chancellor of justice (JK) has dropped the preliminary investigation into suspected agitation against an ethnic group targeting Vera Oredsson, responsible publisher for the Nordfront website. The reason is that the reported material has been removed or edited from the site. Oredsson, 98, living in Ludvika, can no longer be held accountable.

Iniulat ng AI

Sara Nilsson, responsible publisher for the site Dumpen, was convicted in early February of gross defamation after outing a man in a sex chat with a fictional 14-year-old girl. The Sweden Democrats offered to pay her court costs of about half a million kronor, but Nilsson is now hesitating due to a desire for independence. The case has gone to the Enforcement Authority as the costs remain unpaid.

A priest in Västra Götaland, dubbed the 'punk priest', has prevailed against the municipality following a complaint to the Parliamentary Ombudsman (JO). The priest was warned by the diocese after an anonymous complaint about punk music and strong beer at a parish hall, but JO criticizes the municipality's forwarding of the tip.

Iniulat ng AI

Vilma Andersson, 26, the suspect in the Rönninge dismemberment murder, has been deemed free of serious mental disorder and suitable for prison following a forensic psychiatric investigation. Diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder, he expressed dissatisfaction, having hoped for psychiatric care.

A woman in her mid-30s is suspected of graffitiing cow's blood on the Uppsala mosque's facade overnight into Sunday, including a swastika and the words 'häck väck lingonsäck'. Police arrested her shortly afterward while she possessed a knife and a jar of cow's blood. She has been released but remains suspected of aggravated damage, hate crime, and knife law violation.

Iniulat ng AI

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.

 

 

 

Gumagamit ng cookies ang website na ito

Gumagamit kami ng cookies para sa analytics upang mapabuti ang aming site. Basahin ang aming patakaran sa privacy para sa higit pang impormasyon.
Tanggihan