Being prosecuted for GPS on the colleague’s car

NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS TODAY

  • Being prosecuted for GPS on the colleague’s car

    A man in Småland is charged with stalking and molesting a female colleague with whom he had a relationship. He allegedly put a GPS on her car and tried to get into her home via a window, reports SVT Nyheter Småland.

    According to the prosecution, she has received many text messages, calls and handwritten letters from the man. He also allegedly hid behind trees and bushes and spied on her.

    The man makes certain concessions but denies any crime.

  • THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • Warehouse on fire in Strömstad – VMA announced

    A heavy fire rages in a warehouse in Strömstad, resulting in heavy smoke.

    A VMA, Important Public Notice, has been issued to people in the area asking them to go indoors and close doors, windows and ventilation.

    – There is a lot of smoke and it is right outside the city, says alarm and control operator Joakim Hallin to Strömstads Tidning.

    According to the emergency services, the premises must have been empty when the fire broke out. The alarm came in shortly before 1 a.m. Friday night.

  • Tourists trapped in mine

    At least one person is dead and twelve others trapped when an elevator in a mine for tourists in Colorado breaks down, states NBC News.

    A number of tourists that the emergency services managed to evacuate have complained of neck and back pain.

    The police state that the mine has not collapsed and that the people who are trapped have blankets and water awaiting rescue.

  • Trump is becoming a grandfather again

    Donald Trump’s youngest daughter Tiffany Trump, 30, is pregnant with her first child.

    The ex-president revealed it at an event in Detroit, writes People.

    – She is an exceptional young woman. And she’s going to have a child. So that’s nice, Trump said.

    The daughter is married to Michael Boulos, 27, since November 2022.

    Donald Trump, 78, already has ten grandchildren.

  • 63 people killed in Gaza

    According to medical sources to Al Jazeera, 63 people have been killed in Israeli airstrikes during the day.

  • Northvolt: Pays on Monday

    Northvolt will pay the tax to the Swedish Tax Agency, which should be received by Monday at the latest, the company now tells the Financial Times.

    Altogether, it is about a sum of 287 million.

    “To the question of whether we will pay our taxes when they are due on October 14, the answer is the same as for other companies and it is a simple ‘yes’,” writes Northvolt in a comment to the Financial Times.

  • Israel comments on shelling of UN staff

    The IDF, Israel’s military, says its soldiers have been operating in the area of ​​Naqoura in southern Lebanon, near a base for UNIFIL, the UN peacekeeping group in Lebanon, writes Al Jazeera.

    They say they instructed UN personnel in the area to remain in the protective spaces and then opened fire on the forces.

    During the day, the shelling has been condemned in several places, including by the EU’s foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell, who writes on X that “this unacceptable act, which cannot be justified” and repeats the union’s support for Unifil.

  • Pledges support to teachers who refuse to enter students

    Anna Olskog, president of the Swedish Teachers’ Union. Archive image. Photo: Jakob Åkersten Brodén/TT

    The Swedish Teachers’ Union will provide legal help and support to anyone who violates a possible new law on information obligations.

    A so-called “indication law” would mean that teachers need to indicate, for example, undocumented students.

    The government is investigating a duty for municipalities and authorities to sound the alarm if you come into contact with people who are staying illegally in Sweden. The aim is to combat a growing shadow society. The bill has been met with criticism from several quarters. Among other things from the Liberals, one of the government parties, who want to see exceptions to the duty of information for, among other things, schools.

    – We urge the government to back off, says Anna Olskog.

  • New Israeli attacks in Beirut

    Photo: Bilal Hussein/AP

    At least 22 people are said to have died and 117 injured after an Israeli attack on central Beirut, the BBC reports.

    According to information to Reuters, the target must have been a high-ranking person in Hezbollah.

  • Swedish gang criminal arrested in Poland

    A 23-year-old gang criminal man, who is a Swedish citizen, was arrested in Gdansk, Poland in early October, according to Norrköping’s newspapers.

    According to the newspaper, the man must have connections to the Norrköping area.

    The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, UD, confirms the arrest for NT.

    “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is aware that a Swedish man in his 20s, a resident of Götaland, was detained in Poland at the beginning of October,” writes the Foreign Ministry’s press service in an email to the newspaper.

    Chamber prosecutor Karin Sandén leads the preliminary investigation in Sweden.

    – There is a connection to different networks, but I don’t want to go into which ones. I’ll get back to you about that, she says.

    At the moment, she does not want to comment on what the man is suspected of.

    It is unclear when the man will be extradited to Sweden.

  • Marabou recalls popular chocolate bar – may contain hard plastic

    Photo: Marabou

    Mondelez recalls Marabou fruit & almonds 100g. The recall applies to two batches with a best before date of June 6, 2025.

    The chocolate cake is a real classic and has been sold since 1934.

  • House fire in the city center

    There is a fire in a villa in central Skellefteå, writes P4 Västerbotten.

    No one should be in the house, but according to SOS it is burning with open flames

    Emergency services and an ambulance are alerted.

  • Police tracked wrong phone in search of dead girl

    Flowers outside the high school in Marks municipality after the 17-year-old girl was found dead. Archived. Photo: Adam Ihse/TT

    In March, a 17-year-old girl disappeared in the municipality of Marks. Four days later she was found dead near her school.

    Police now say they initially looked for her nearly 30 miles away because they traced the wrong phone.

    The internal investigation by the police now shows that two mistakes were made in the search for the girl, reports P4 Sjuhärad. In addition to tracking the wrong number, they also did not take into account the vulnerability that the girl’s disability meant.

  • LO opens to withdraw multimillion-dollar support to S

    Johan Lindholm. Photo: Lotte Fernvall

    Johan Lindholm, LO’s chairman, says i SVT‘s program “30 minutes” that they open to withdraw support for the Social Democrats.

    The party receives approximately SEK 6 million per year directly from LO’s membership fees.

    – I, and many with me, may think that it is perhaps downright unfashionable. And of course we have to look at that, says Lindholm.

    Read more here.

  • Disruption in traffic after tram collision

    A bus and a tram have collided at Åkareplatsen in Gothenburg, write GP.

    – Right now it is completely still, we don’t know much at the moment. Travelers can expect delays for all lines that pass Åkareplatsen, says Carina Kjellgren, disruption coordinator at Västtrafik, to the newspaper.

    Travelers are encouraged to keep track of their journey in the To Go app.

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