Bandidos in Helsingborg turned 30 and the guests flocked, even from other countries.
The police worked on the basis of a new method – which resulted in five people being rejected with the support of the Aliens Act. They were considered to intend to commit crimes in Sweden.
Another person was arrested with a knife and was sentenced to eight months in prison for serious violation of the knife law.
Make a survey
The new working method is that the border police in collaboration with international police make a survey of certain persons’ crime and thus receive an overall assessment of the risk of new crimes.
“When they come here, we have the survey ready and use the Aliens Act to reject people,” says Mats Berggren, head of the Border Police Unit at the National Operations Department.
The new method has proven to be effective.
– Over the past year, we have rejected 270 people from Sweden. This is a sharp increase, says Mats Berggren.
Two have appealed
It has been about everything from football hooligans to international theft leagues steering wheel and crimes in nutritional relationships. The strike against Bandidos was the first against a motorcycle club.
A couple of the persons who have now been rejected have appealed the decision to the Migration Board.
– We are actually looking forward to their decision to see if this also holds in a higher instance, says Mats Berggren.