With mounted blue lights, the gang leader drove around and stopped other cars in Södertälje.
Just like the police usually do.
“This is deemed to be done to exercise power and control,” writes the prosecutor, who has now issued a so-called restraining order against the man.
He is singled out as a leading figure in the criminal network Ronnaphalangen. With a blue light mounted on his car, the 21-year-old drove around, stopped and checked other cars in the same way as the police usually do, something that LT was the first to tell.
The man is now banned from staying in central Södertälje.
“This is deemed to be done in order to exercise power and control over which people are staying in which place at which time in Södertälje,” writes the prosecutor in the decision.
Until the first day of 2025, the gang leader also has a stay ban in the Saltskog and Västra Blombacka districts.
Involved in murder
It is the second time that the Södertälje police have used the new law – where people who commit crimes that risk leading to the use of firearms or explosives – can be transported from an area.
And it is not the first time the gang leader has been punished.
Previously, the 21-year-old was convicted of aggravated protection of a criminal in connection with the murder in Saltskog in October 2022.
A week after serving his sentence, he was sentenced again, to three months in prison for unlawful threats and assault in connection with an attack on a hair salon earlier this year.
And now he is in custody again – suspected as one of the eight who stormed a student record at the beginning of June.