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Asked for the names of the children of the prison warder
Daniel Friberg
21 years old,
Göteborg.
Mattias Högberg
21 years old,
Säffle.
Jonas Granborg
34 years old,
Malmö.
Erling Guldbrandzén
20 years old,
Nacka.
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Daniel Hansson
22 years old,
Göteborg.
Hampus Hellekant
23 years old,
Stockholm.
Patrick Huisman
27 years old,
Göteborg.
Erik Hägglund
27 years old,
Stockholm.
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The threats from Lehto came when he was supposed to be moved to another
prison. The warder made a report to the police and an investigation
started.
During that time Lehto wrote a letter to Patrik Huisman, the
leader of the criminal association the Wolfpack Brotherhood.
"Hail brother!" he started the letter, that also included a copy of a
report on the warder's view of the threat.
Of course this wasn't the same as Miitri Lehto's view who full of desire
for revenge continued his letter:
".one day (they) must open up the door of freedom to us, and with that
end their lives on this earth. I wouldn't be surprised if the X family
(the family name of the keeper) ends their existence in a near future."
Thereafter Lehto asks for help to find the home address of the warder
and: ".even the address to X junior is needed as our brothers surely want
to wish them the best in this time of violence and hatred. You should
find them in the telephone book, no don't bother about that, I will call
the tax authority tomorrow anyway, one can order a computer printout of
everyone in the X family.
In this place in the letter Lehto has drawn a round face with a happy
smile.
Säpo: the number of serious Nazi crimes has increased
Letters to the prisoners at Kumla may be controlled by the warders and
this was done also this time. The warder concerned got to read the
threatening lines.
Miitri Lehto wasn't sentenced for the letter. "Lehto's assertion that
these are things prisoners usually write to each other in order to
exchange thoughts, can't be ignored", the court of appeal wrote in its
sentence of acquittal.
According to Säpo, the Swedish Security Police, the number of serious
crimes committed by young Nazis increased during 1997 and 1998. Moreover,
at a meeting last spring, one of the leaders of the Swedish Nazi movement
made the following statement:
- The summer of 1999 will go into history as the bloody summer.
This was followed by the violent acts at Malexander, Nacka and Sätra.
A couple of years ago, the mc gangs and the Nazi organisations began to
contact each other. Most contacts take place in the country's prisons.
Right now, the Nazis are the most offensive groups. They commit the
largest amount of violent acts, and recruit active members through the
Internet and distribute leaflets in schools.
The criminal mc gangs and their members operate in a more businesslike
way, either to protect their own criminal interests, or as hired hitmen
in the service of economic crime. Over the past years, mc violence has
become more sophisticated, but for four years in the middle of the
nineties, the mc gangs in Scandinavia continuously attacked each other.
All together, eleven people were killed and 96 were injured in fights
that came to be described as a "mc war".
The use of grenades and bombs were a clear message for the authorities
that the mc clubs were capable and ready to use extreme violence.
Witnesses are threatened into silence
In the crime intelligence service it is said that the mc gangs have built
a capital based on fear, a kind of terror capital. It is currently used
to threaten the witnesses, the authorities and the journalists. All that
is needed are a few questions, all of them within the law, about which
day care the children go to, to silence a witness through fear.
The terror capital allows for this type of action.
Threats and violence against the police and the prosecutors who
investigate mc crime have increased significantly in Skåne, where a large
amount of mc crime takes place. The beginning of the Hells Angels'
offensive against the legal authorities can be traced back to the hour.
On February 7 and 8, 1998, the motor club Roadrunners have a party in
Malmö. Many Hells Angels' members are present, including their leader
Thomas Möller. The police, wearing yellow protection vests with "police"
written on it, suddenly storm in. During the razzia Möller was
apprehended for narcotics offence, a suspicion that he was later freed
from. When Möller is about to be driven away, at a quarter past midnight,
he turns to his companions and says referring to the policeman next to
him:
- Pay attention to this man. Something will happen to him. We have to get
him if he pulls this through. Find out his name, mark him.
This threat results in a series of other threats and violence against
other policemen. The policeman who registered Möller's threat gets phone
calls every night before the trial.
I wouldn't be surprised if the X family
(the family name of the keeper) ends their existence in a near future
Lehto in a letter to Patrik Huisman, the
leader of the Wolfpack Brotherhood.
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