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Mattias FLINK
Early
years
Flink was born and raised in Falun. His mother was a
housewife and his father and grandfather worked as weaponry blacksmiths
with their own shop. At the age of seven Flink joined the Scout Movement.
His parents divorced when he was nine years old and the divorce is
described as having been calm and sensible. Flink chose to stay with his
father in the family house while his mother moved to an apartment just a
couple of hundred meters from the house. According to psychological
evaluations his mother's departure left deep scars within Flink. It is
said that Flink developed some kind of alienation towards women.
Flink attended high school with a focus on Electric
Mechanical studies. After his graduation Flink enlisted as a conscript
with Dalregementet. He committed himself to become an officer of the
Swedish Army and was employed at Dalaregementet in 1993.
The
mass murder
On June 11, 1994,
Second Lieutenant Mattias Flink consumed a large amount of alcohol. Then
he went home to change his clothes. Dressed in his field uniform he
walked to his regiment. He equipped himself with his Automatic rifle the
AK5 and 150 bullets, 5.56 caliber. Flink then set out for a park in the
centre of Falun where he shot down 6 members of the Women's Auxiliary
Services. The women were shot down randomly. Shortly thereafter he shot
down two men, one cyclist and one security officer, at a nearby road
crossing. Six of the victims died immediately, while one woman died in
hospital. One victim survived the attack.
Victims
Karin Alkstål, 23
Therese Danielsson, 20
Helle Jürgensen
Lena Mårdner-Nilsson, 29
Jenny Österman, 22
Maths Bragstedt, 35
Johan Tollsten, 26
The trial
In the district court the defense never questioned
the prosecutor's description of the crime. The question for the defense
was whether or not Flink was mentally ill at the time of the shooting.
According to experts, Flink was in a self-inflicted temporary psychotic
condition, triggered by alcohol, on the evening of the crime. If Flink
was found to be mentally ill he would not be able to be sentenced to
prison. The final verdict came in the Swedish Supreme Court; Mattias
Flink was sentenced to life imprisonment. This precedent verdict made it
possible for the courts in Sweden to sentence people to prison for
crimes stemming from and committed during an alcohol-induced psychosis.
Five of those killed were young
women serving in an army auxiliary unit, who had been on a one-week
course at the base where the gunman was stationed, police said.
The 24-year-old gunman was captured
after a shootout with police and he confessed, police said. He was
hospitalized with a gunshot wound in the hip.
"Love trouble seems to have been the
triggering factor," said defense attorney Gunnar Lundgren on Swedish
radio.
"Love trouble seems to have been the
triggering factor," defense attorney Gunnar Lundgren said.
The army's chief psychiatrist, Per-Olof
Michel, said mental illness or drug abuse also might have played a role.
Army officer kills 7; crime shocks Sweden
A Swedish army officer ran amok with an automatic
rifle early Saturday, killing five young women and two men and seriously
injuring another woman, police said.
Authorities called the attack the worst violent crime
in modern Swedish history.
The soldier, a 24-year-old second lieutenant, walked
out of his army base at Falun about 2:30 a.m. and opened fire
indiscriminately on a group of party-goers.
Five of those killed were young women serving in an
army auxiliary unit that had been on a one-week course at the base where
the gunman was stationed, police said. The victims had been attending an
outdoor party close to the base. Such parties are common in Sweden in
June, when there is virtually no darkness.
The soldier calmly opened fire on the six women in a
forested area and then shot the two men as he fled from the scene.
One man, who had been alerted by the noise, was
killed as he arrived on the scene in his car. The other man was slain as
he was riding past on his bicycle. All the victims were in their 20s,
police said.
Two policemen encountered the gunman shortly after
the attack. He opened fire on them, and the police shot him.
The gunman was in stable condition in a hospital
Saturday and was questioned by police. A police spokesman declined to
reveal any motive for the killings, but other officers said he
apparently was drunk at the time.
Army spokesman Tage Johansson told the national news
agency TT that all army officers were issued weapons, in this case a
5.56mm AK5 assault rifle. It was unclear how the gunman got his weapon
past guards at the army base.
Col. Lars Walen, the killer's senior officer, told
Swedish radio that he had no clue as to why the officer did it.
"It's completely meaningless and absurd," he said.
The violence of the attack was jarring in Sweden,
where only 120 to 150 murders are reported a year. Police said the only
similar killing they could recall was when a gunman killed one person in
1992 in Mora, a town in central Sweden.