Courtroom illustration depicting the sentencing of a man for raping a 100-year-old woman during home care in Stockholm.
Courtroom illustration depicting the sentencing of a man for raping a 100-year-old woman during home care in Stockholm.
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Man sentenced for rape of 100-year-old in home care

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A 38-year-old man has been sentenced to four years in prison for raping a 100-year-old woman during a home care visit in Stockholm in October. The city was informed the next day but did not report to police; the woman's family did so three weeks later. The ruling has sparked reactions, especially over the lack of deportation.

In October, the 100-year-old woman called an ambulance due to chest pains. Instead, home care worker Shakir Mahmoud Shakir, 38, arrived at her home in Stockholm. According to the woman's testimony, he claimed he was there to apply oil but inserted an object into her vagina and continued despite her screams.

The family reported the incident to police three weeks later, even though Stockholm city was informed the day after the visit. Communications chief Carl Smitterberg at the elderly administration acknowledges shortcomings: 'This is clearly something we need to look into and learn from. We probably need to be quicker to report suspicions to police.' The city has initiated a Lex Sarah investigation linked to the man.

Stockholm District Court sentenced Shakir to four years in prison for the rape. He was acquitted of a similar charge against a 94-year-old due to insufficient evidence. The prosecutor sought deportation, but the court denied it, citing the man's ties to Sweden, including a young child. Judge Mohamed Ali explained: 'We assessed that the reasons against deportation were stronger.'

The woman's legal counsel Anders Unnbäck says she is relieved by the verdict: 'It's a relief for her that a judgment has come.' She is described as credible in court and has declined in health since the assault. The family criticizes home care routines, especially the lack of a police report and background checks.

The government proposes legal changes to expand municipalities' rights to check criminal records for new hires, effective from March 1, 2026. Stockholm city welcomes the proposal and already applies such checks.

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Discussions on X predominantly express outrage over the court's refusal to deport the 38-year-old Iraqi man convicted of raping a 100-year-old woman in Stockholm home care, despite a four-year sentence. Users criticize the judge's 'disproportionate' reasoning, highlight immigration failures, and demand stricter laws and appeals. High-engagement posts from journalists, politicians, and public figures amplify concerns about elderly safety and judicial leniency.

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A 61-year-old man being sentenced in court for gross procuring.
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61-year-old sentenced to prison for selling his wife

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A 61-year-old man in Ångermanland has been sentenced to four years and five months in prison for gross procuring. Ångermanlands tingsrätt also convicted him of several other crimes after he sold his wife to over 120 men over several years.

A man in his 20s who worked in home care services in Örebro faces indictment for secretly filming, assaulting, and molesting 13 clients in their homes. The charges involve repeated illegal filming and photographing. Several victims are in their 90s and suffer from dementia.

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A man in his 60s was arrested at his home on Tuesday morning on suspicion of three rapes. According to Aftonbladet the man is a police officer who has held a managerial position within the authority.

A man in his 30s has been detained on suspicion of murdering a man in his 50s in Märsta north of Stockholm. The incident occurred on Sunday morning in an apartment building.

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Falu District Court has sentenced a man in his 20s to one year and ten months in prison for gross fraud and money laundering. He deceived an elderly couple out of jewelry and gold worth nearly one million kronor by posing as a police officer.

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