Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Polaris of Enlightenment

Swedish district court rent payments go to identified gang members

Deteriorating safety

Published 5 February 2024
– By Editorial Staff
The building at Stora Torget in Södertälje that houses the city's district court.
4 minute read

The Södertälje district court is owned by a group of companies directly linked to a key figure in the notorious Södertälje network, according to the Bonnier newspaper DN.

Despite several attempts by the Swedish Courts Administration to break the link, the lease remains in place and the report shows links between the owners and the city’s organized crime gangs.

The Södertälje district court is grappling with a dark reality of serious crime, where murder, kidnapping and extortion seem to have become commonplace. It has now been revealed that the county court is owned by a group of companies linked to a central figure in the Södertälje network. Despite attempts by the Swedish National Courts Administration (Domstolsverket) to resolve the situation, the agency pays millions in rent to the company every year, according to the Bonnier-owned newspaper DN.

The county court building and the old police station in Södertälje were previously owned by a large, publicly traded real estate company. Due to the high level of crime in the city, the real estate giant decided to sell and leave Södertälje, according to insider reports from the company.

In 2016, the property was sold when a couple of local entrepreneurs stepped in. Their company quickly became part of a larger group, and the group’s main owner drew strong reactions from both the police and prosecutors working against organized crime.

At the head of the group, a well-known construction contractor is registered as the main owner. Although the man has not yet been convicted of any crime, he has been identified as a key player in the Södertälje network, according to a secret report by the National Operations Department (Polisens nationella operativa avdelning NOA).

“Oh, my God! I think I’m going to faint! Södertälje District Court is owned by a group of companies directly linked to a key person in the Södertälje network, reports DN. In addition, several of the owners have had access to the district court’s premises. The Swedish National Courts Administration has tried to solve the problem, but has not succeeded”, comments Twitter/X user Victoria W Andersson.

Ongoing investigation

An ongoing investigation against the man, led by prosecutor Fredrik Sandberg, concerns extensive financial crimes, including money laundering and transactions of more than SEK 3.5 million (eur 3.1 million), in several of his companies. One of these companies is directly linked to the ownership of the building where the district court is located.

The somewhat peculiar ownership structure of the Södertälje District Court has long been the subject of concern within the Swedish National Courts Administration, with internal documents revealing discussions about the link to the partners and the desire for a link to the security unit.

The management of the courthouse has also been problematic. The current owners used to have access to the courthouse and garage. However, for security reasons, the court was able to stop this and an administrator – albeit one appointed by the owners – took over.

Nina Stubbe, court manager at Södertälje District Court, also confirms that she still meets the owners from time to time.

– I sometimes meet them down here, she says, referring to the area next to the garage.

Södertälje has become a very crime-prone city. Photo: Holger.Ellgaard/CC BY-SA 4.0

Cash cow for criminals

Rental income from the district court has proven to be a significant cash cow for the group, with more than 45 million SEK paid by the Swedish National Courts Administration over the past seven years. The owners have also taken significant profits – SEK 12 million in 2023 alone – which has raised questions about the appropriateness of this financial arrangement.

The person who signed the profit distribution is the man’s close business partner, who is also a partner in the group. He is also identified by several police sources as a key part of Södertälje’s organized crime. The man has previously been convicted of violent crimes and his bank accounts have been frozen.

Harald Pleijel, director of property at the Swedish National Courts Administration, and Nina Stubbe, head of the district court, question the whole system where private actors with profit interests can own courts. This could ultimately threaten the independence of the courts.

– Should we have courts that are owned by private for-profit actors? Even foreign actors? asks Stubbe.

Last fall, the Swedish National Court Administration decided to leave the property on Storgatan and try to find a new landlord. It also considered the possibility of building a completely new courthouse. However, despite the decision to leave the current premises, the court will continue to rent them for at least four more years – generating millions in additional revenue for the owners.

The Södertälje network (Södertäljenätverket) was previously referred to in mass media reports as the Syrian Brotherhood - but this name was abandoned as it was considered to stigmatize the ethnic group in question.

The criminal network is believed to consist of around 100 people and has been involved in a number of murders, explosions, extortion, money laundering, kidnapping, robbery, fraud and drug trafficking.

According to the police, the Södertälje network operates as a mafia-like organization and can be found in all areas of civil society. People with links to the gang are also involved in local politics.

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Eight arrested after bloody knife fight at Malmö school

Deteriorating safety

Published 10 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Eight people have been arrested, but police do not rule out that additional arrests may soon be made.
1 minute read

Four people are being treated in hospital, two with life-threatening injuries, after an extensive knife fight at Österportskolan in Malmö, Sweden during the night leading to Saturday.

Eight suspected perpetrators have been arrested and police are investigating the incident as attempted murder.

Shortly after midnight, police were alerted that around 20 people were involved in a large fight on the grounds of Österportskolan in the southern Swedish city of Malmö.

— There was stabbing with knives left and right so four people are in hospital with knife wounds, two of whom are seriously injured, says Michael Lindh, duty commander at police region South, to TT (Swedish news agency).

When police arrived, only a few people remained at the scene, including a stabbed man in his 20s who was taken to hospital by ambulance.

— One person was taken to hospital in an ambulance and three in a private car, explains Filip Annas, press spokesperson for police region South, to Schibsted-owned TV4 Nyheterna.

“More may be involved”

A total of eight people have been arrested, including the four being treated in hospital.

One of those arrested is 15 years old, the others are between 20-25 years old. The incident is classified as attempted murder.

— It cannot be ruled out that more may be involved, states Filip Annas.

The area has been cordoned off for technical investigation. Police have conducted door-to-door inquiries in the area and held witness interviews. More interviews are expected to be held in the coming days.

Mass migration was meant to save Sandviken – now it’s compared to Sweden’s worst suburbs

Population replacement in the West

Published 7 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Areas that were meant to become symbols of integration – now marked by surveillance, anxiety and exodus.
3 minute read

Politicians and media promised that mass immigration would make Sandviken, Sweden into an economic success story. Ten years later, reality is much bleaker: half the city is now classified as an exclusion area and compared to notorious problem suburbs like Rinkeby and Tjärna Ängar.

In 2014, left-liberal media, led by the Bonnier-owned Dagens Nyheter (Sweden’s largest daily newspaper), trumpeted that mass migration to Sandviken was a gigantic profitable venture that would make the entire municipality economically prosperous.

“Earns over half a billion from immigration”, read DN’s headline, claiming that each immigrant resident would generate €13,000 annually in revenue for the municipality.

The claims were based on figures in a report by auditing firm PwC and had been commissioned by the municipality itself.

Mass immigration was supposed to be a success for Sandviken. Photo: facsimile/DN

However, the optimistic calculations were based on fantasies and wishful thinking, and within just a couple of years it became clear that the municipality’s financial situation had instead become severely strained – with a budget deficit of €6 million.

— It was a fantasy scenario that was painted. The report was flawed from the beginning. How could anyone stand behind it? wondered Moderate Party opposition councilor Jonny Bratberg in 2019.

“White flight”

And since then, the situation has hardly improved. No billion-euro profits from mass immigration have materialized. Instead, the Swedish government now classifies half of Sandviken as an “exclusion area” – on the same list as notorious immigrant-dense and crime-ridden suburbs like Rinkeby (in Stockholm), Tjärna Ängar in Borlänge, and Gottsunda in Uppsala.

Surveillance cameras now sit on almost every street corner, and Emma Holmqvist, a segregation researcher at Uppsala University, notes that a large portion of the ethnically Swedish population has fled from immigrant-dense parts of Sandviken – and that other Swedes avoid moving there.

— ‘White flight, white avoidance’ is what we call it, says Emma Holmqvist.

— In long-term studies we can see that those with high incomes are partly driving spirals of segregation. They have housing choices that low-income earners lack. They can move away from an area with rental apartments and negative development, simply by purchasing housing.

Swedes don’t want to live with immigrants

She emphasizes, however, that people – regardless of group affiliation – tend to want to live near people who are like themselves, and that this applies to both families with children and high-income earners.

— But one thing that stands out is that many with immigrant backgrounds tend to want to live with more Swedes – the opposite rarely applies to native-born Swedes, she notes.

That Swedes in Sandviken don’t want to live together with immigrants is pointed out as a major and acute problem that must be solved by politicians – for example, by building more rental apartments in villa neighborhoods.

Children as integration tools

The municipality’s politicians have previously attracted attention in connection with a heavily criticized integration initiative where they made the decision to forcibly relocate mainly Swedish children from villa areas to an immigrant-dense, low-performing school in an exclusion area.

The decision enraged many parents and was described as a kind of “social experiment,” where children were involuntarily made into tools in politicians’ integration policy project.

— This is some form of Social Democratic wet dream, where you mix up the students in yet another integration project. You take an A-school and exchange half the students with a D-school, and then you get two C-schools instead – so everyone becomes satisfied and happy. It’s completely insane, of course, commented Jonny Bratberg on the matter in Tidningen Näringslivet (a Swedish business publication).

Abdullah stabs at police officer’s kidneys in Dublin attack

Migrant violence

Published 1 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
23-year-old Abdullah Khan was caught on film during the frenzied attack against a young police officer who was walking in central Dublin, Ireland.
2 minute read

A 23-year-old immigrant has been remanded in custody after attacking and stabbing a young Irish police officer in broad daylight in central Dublin. The attack, which was caught on film, occurred completely unprovoked while the police were on patrol on Tuesday.

The perpetrator, Abdullah Khan, was arrested at the scene after the brutal assault that took place on Capel Street in central Dublin on Tuesday afternoon around 6 PM. The attacked officer, a young trainee who was on high-visibility patrol with a colleague, was treated at hospital for injuries that miraculously were not life-threatening.

Abdullah, a second-generation immigrant born in Ireland with an address in north Dublin, is accused of assault and possession of a so-called Tactix knife.

At Thursday’s remand hearing at Dublin District Court, the 23-year-old man made no application for bail and sat silently through the entire brief hearing.

Unprovoked deadly violence in broad daylight

The attack is described by authorities as completely unprovoked and took place in the city center while police were carrying out their regular duties. Suddenly Abdullah appears on the street with the knife in his hand as the incident is caught on film. He goes directly on the attack from behind against the young police officer and attempts to stab him with the knife toward the kidney area of his back.

Miraculously, he strikes poorly with the knife and the two police officers manage to regain their composure and after a struggle with tear gas and batons, disarm and arrest the man.

The injured officer has since been discharged from hospital.

— This evening’s unprovoked assault is indicative of what gardaí (police) can face when they go out on duty to keep people safe, said Assistant Commissioner Paul Cleary to the Roscommon Herald.

Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin condemned the incident and described it as “shocking.” Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan and opposition leader Mary Lou McDonald also expressed their condemnation of the unprovoked violence.

Abdullah is next due to appear before Cloverhill District Court on August 6 pending directions from prosecutors.

Wave of home burglaries hits southern Sweden

Deteriorating safety

Published 31 July 2025
– By Editorial Staff
A residential area in Stockholm, Sweden. NOTE: The image is an archive photo and is not connected to the text.
2 minute read

A wave of well-planned home burglaries has swept across southern Sweden during July. Swedish police suspect that organized gangs are behind the crimes and are now urging the public to increase vigilance.

During July, Sweden has been hit by an unusually extensive wave of home burglaries with between 45 and 50 reported cases. The crimes are spread across the West, South and East police regions, and most of the break-ins have been carried out in a similar manner, leading police to suspect that an organized gang is behind them.

The perpetrators have often gained entry by lifting out entire window frames. They have then hung up sheets indoors to conceal their presence, sorted stolen goods on beds and focused on taking jewelry and cash.

Break-ins where windows are lifted out is a well-known method, which often occurs in residential villa areas. Similar shoe prints left at multiple locations strengthen suspicions that the same group may be behind a large number of the crimes.

Professional gangs

Swedish police assess that these are professional perpetrators with good knowledge of alarms and locking devices. At least two people have likely participated in each break-in. In some cases, the properties have been surveilled in advance, indicating that the crimes were carefully planned.

These are professional and organized gangs behind these crimes. We believe that at least two perpetrators were involved in each break-in. And in some cases we suspect they visited the locations and conducted surveillance some time before the actual break-in, says Lina Carlshamre, crime analyst at the crime coordination unit in the West police region, in a press release.

In response to this development, Swedish police have strengthened cooperation between the affected regions. The authorities are now urging villa owners to be extra vigilant – especially during vacation periods when many homes stand empty.

They emphasize the importance of maintaining contact with neighbors and reporting suspicious behavior. According to crime analysts, the motto is: better once too often than once too little.

Despite the fact that the number of residential burglaries has decreased somewhat in the country in recent years, July’s statistics show that the threat to villa owners remains.

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