Author Topic: They cut the throat of a 65-year old man - escape punishment  (Read 260 times)

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rangerrebew

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They cut the throat of a 65-year old man - escape punishment
 
http://speisa.com/modules/articles/index.php/item.2593/they-cut-the-throat-of-a-65-year-old-man-escape-punishment.html

Two 14-year-old boys were brought to justice suspected of murdering a 65-year-old man in Sweden last summer. But because the boys are not criminal responsible they escape punishment.

When they on June 8 last year ran from foster care in a home outside Varberg, they took a bike to a nearby farm where they broke into the main house.

Inside the house they started to look for valuables and smashed parts of the interior. They found, among other things, money, jewelry, jackets, cigarettes and food, according to the documents from the Prosecution Office in Halmstad.

The boys also tried to steal a red Subaru Forester that was parked outside the house, but when they failed, they instead smashed the car.

During the burglary they discovered the owner of the house, a 65-year-old man who was asleep. The boys attacked the man, stabbed him in the head, in the back, in one foot and then cut his throat. In addition they throw a large rock on the 65-year-old, who badly wounded was bleeding to death because of the severed carotid artery.

The boys were quickly arrested for the brutal murder. Now they face charges, but the risk of being sentenced for the crimes are not great, because they are under 15 years old. Instead a so-called proof of action is conducted, which goal is to investigate which of the two boys did what when the 65-year-old man was killed.

According to data from the population register, one of the two killers is a refugee, born in Iraq, and came to Sweden from Syria a few years ago. The boy has already managed to get Swedish citizenship.

The other boy has a Swedish name, but his personal information is classified, according to Fria Tider.

- One gets a long red line where it says; "This person has the protection of personal data under Chapter 22 ยง1 Public Access and Secrecy," says an officer at the Swedish Tax Agency, to the news outlet.
« Last Edit: March 12, 2016, 01:11:48 pm by rangerrebew »