Strömmer rejects prison for 12-year-olds amid Oxie murder case

Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer has rejected lowering the age of criminal responsibility to 12 following the suspected murder of a 21-year-old man in Oxie near Malmö by a 12-year-old boy. He stresses a 'lower limit' exists and calls for stronger social services interventions.

In the wake of Saturday's fatal shooting in Oxie—where a 12-year-old boy is suspected of killing a 21-year-old man and fleeing toward Helsingborg—Strömmer (M) held a press conference on Wednesday after meetings with party criminal policy spokespersons.

The government proposes prison eligibility for 13-year-olds in serious cases but rules out 12. "It is not relevant," Strömmer said. "There is some kind of lower limit."

He expressed no surprise at the suspect's age, noting around 50 youths under 15 involved in murders or plots this year. Debate centers on whether small municipalities' social services can handle such cases or if criminal care should intervene for 13–14-year-olds. "We see a large group of children who today are not handled well," he said.

Police have held crisis meetings, highlighting social services' lack of tools for such young serious offenders. Strömmer agrees: "No thinking or feeling person wants children locked up." Yet, he notes some commit grave crimes like murders, shootings, and explosions, posing risks.

Reforms include a new social services law, broken secrecy barriers, tougher parental measures, and LVU review. Despite protests from 168 prosecutors and judges, Strömmer welcomes debate on this 'biggest unsolved problem' but deems alternatives insufficient.

Authorities continue searching for additional perpetrators or instigators.

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Dramatic illustration of a 15-year-old girl detained by police at a Swedish gang crime scene in Rosengård, evoking double murder investigation.
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15-year-old girl detained, denies double murders in Vårby and Rosengård; criminologist on girls in gang crime

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A 15-year-old girl was detained Friday on suspicion of double murder after shootings in Vårby near Stockholm on Monday and Rosengård, Malmö, on Wednesday—events linked to organized crime. She denies the charges. Expert Camila Salazar Atías warns girls often evade radar as perpetrators in criminal networks, citing rising convictions among teen girls.

An eleven-year-old boy from Västerbotten has been taken into care under LVU after backing out of a murder assignment around Christmas 2025. He now faces threats from the criminals who hired him, and police assess the risk as high. The administrative court ordered placement in a foster home due to care deficiencies.

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A 15-year-old boy has been sentenced to one year and nine months of closed youth care for shooting at an apartment in Brickebacken, Örebro, on July 12, 2025. Five other people are sentenced for aiding in various ways, including an 18-year-old who receives ten years in prison for planning. Three people were inside the apartment at the time.

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