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CRIME

Frenchman charged with murder of Swedish student

A 51 year-old Frenchman was charged in Paris on Sunday with the murder of a 19-year-old Swedish woman found shot through the head and stabbed in a forest near Paris this month.

Frenchman charged with murder of Swedish student

Bruno Cholet, who allegedly posed as a taxi driver to entrap his victim according to investigators, also faces charges of kidnapping, false imprisonment and theft.

If found guilty he could face life imprisonment.

The victim, Swedish student Susanna Zetterberg, was found in Chantilly Forest north of Paris on April 19th with four bullets in her head. She was handcuffed, had been knifed in the chest, and her body was partly charred.

The arrest and charges followed a major police manhunt with extra officers drafted in by the Paris criminal investigation department.

Investigators said they had accumulated a mass of evidence against the suspect, including a pistol found in the boot of his car and bullets matching those used to kill the victim.

Court officials said Cholet, arrested last Friday, has a criminal record and had already spent 20 years in jail for various offences including rape and kidnapping.

The victim had gone missing on her way home from a Paris nightclub. After taking a taxi, she sent a text message to a friend saying the driver “doesn’t look nice.”

The suspect, who had allegedly posed as a taxi driver, was arrested in a western suburb of the capital, police said.

Police searching his vehicle had found a .22 pistol, cartridges, three pairs of handcuffs and a bag with the inscription “Susanna 777,” the prosecutor’s office said.

Police said closed circuit surveillance cameras had picked up a figure using the victim’s credit card outside a bank, wearing clothes that matched those found in Cholet’s flat.

A white car that looked like that of the suspect was also reported by witnesses near the nightclub where the victim was last seen alive.

After the discovery of the body, another woman reported to police being molested a week earlier by a man, apparently a taxi driver, driving a white car. Another witness claimed to have seen a similar vehicle in the forest where the body was found.

Cholet was set to appear before an examining magistrate on Sunday evening.

CRIME

Nordic justice ministers meet tech giants on gangs using apps to hire ‘child soldiers’

The justice ministers of Denmark, Sweden and Norway are to meet representatives of the tech giants Google, Meta, Snapchat and TikTok, to discuss how to stop their platforms being used by gang criminals in the region.

Nordic justice ministers meet tech giants on gangs using apps to hire 'child soldiers'

Denmark’s justice minister, Peter Hummelgaard, said in a press release that he hoped to use the meeting on Friday afternoon to discuss how to stop social media and messaging apps being used by gang criminals, who Danish police revealed earlier this year were using them to recruit so-called “child soldiers” to carry out gang killings.  

“We have seen many examples of how the gangs are using social media and encrypted messaging services to plan serious crimes and recruit very young people to do their dirty work,” Hummelgaard said. “My Nordic colleagues and I agree that a common front is needed to get a grip on this problem.”

As well as recruitment, lists have been found spreading on social media detailing the payments on offer for various criminal services.   

Hummelgaard said he would “insist that the tech giants live up to their responsibilities so that their platforms do not act as hotbeds for serious crimes” at the meeting, which will take place at a summit of Nordic justice ministers in Uppsala, Sweden.

In August, Hummelgaard held a meeting in Copenhagen with Sweden’s justice minister, Gunnar Strömmer, at which the two agreed to work harder to tackle cross-border organised crime, which has seen a series of Swedish youth arrested in Denmark after being recruited to carry out hits in the country. 

According to a press release from the Swedish justice ministry, the morning will be spent discussing how to combat the criminal economy and particularly organised crime in ports, with a press release from Finland’s justice ministry adding that the discussion would also touch on the “undue influence on judicial authorities” from organised crime groups. 

The day will end with a round table discussion with Ronald S Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress, on how anti-Semitism and hate crimes against Jews can be prevented and fought in the Nordic region. 

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