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Karl Helge Hampus HELLEKANT

 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 


A.K.A.: Sätramördaren ("Sätra murderer")
 
New name: Karl Svensson
 
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Swedish neo-Nazi - Hate crime
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: October 12, 1999
Date of birth: January 30, 1976
Victim profile: Björn Söderberg, 41 (syndicalist union member)
Method of murder: Shooting
Location: Sätra, Stockholm, Sweden
Status: Sentenced to 11 years in prison in 2000. After serving 6 1/2 years, Mr. Hellekant was released on parole in February 2007
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Karl Helge Hampus Hellekant, later Karl Svensson (born January 30, 1976 in Danderyd, Stockholm County) is a Swedish neo-Nazi who was sentenced to 11 years of prison for the murder of syndicalist union member Björn Söderberg on October 12, 1999.

Shortly before the murder, Hellekant and some of his friends created "death lists" of more than 1200 Swedish individuals they wanted dead. Because of the content of the lists, his friends were also sentenced and the murder was declared a hate crime. Hellekant's efforts to become a physician, and his eventual dismissal from medical school at Karolinska Institute, became a controversial case in medical ethics.

Murder of Björn Söderberg

On September 16, 1999, the syndicalist newspaper Arbetaren revealed that Robert Vesterlund, a prominent figure in the Swedish neo-Nazi movement, held a chair in the board of the local chapter of the Swedish Commercial Employees' Union at Svanströms lager in Stockholm. Arbetaren had received the information from a co-worker of Vesterlund, the syndicalist union member Björn Söderberg. A week later, Vesterlund was expelled from his union, and quit his job.

Because of this, Hellekant and two friends, Björn Lindberg-Hernlund and Jimmy Niklasson, came to Söderberg's home in Sätra on October 12. Hellekant has admitted that he, ordered by another person, called Söderberg a few hours earlier. A brawl ensued, and a few minutes later, Söderberg had been shot multiple times, including in the head.

In 2005, he was caught while on temporary release from the prison, suspected of assisting a fellow inmate at the Hall prison in an escape attempt. In February 2007, he was released on probation.

Medical school controversy

In the fall of 2007, Hellekant enrolled in medical school at the Karolinska University Hospital. When his criminal history became known to the university as well as the media in early November, a debate ensued as to whether a convicted murderer should be allowed to practice medicine. While some commentators called for Hellekant to be expelled from the university, Karolinska decided that he would be allowed to continue his studies, with head master Harriet Wallberg-Henriksson stating there was no legal way to expel him, as "no national policy covers the situation". She did however state that she considers it unethical to let convicted murderers practice medicine, and that it would be hard for Hellekant to get a physicians' license from the National Board of Health and Welfare, which is required to practice.

In January 2008 it was discovered that Hellekant apparently had falsified the name on his high school transcripts, and that the authenticity of his high school grades could not be verified. He was then expelled from Karolinska. However, in 2009 it was reported that Hellekant had been accepted to medical school at Uppsala University.

The case generated a debate within the medical community, both in Sweden and abroad, over the appropriate criteria for exclusion from medical school. Bioethicist Jacob Appel, an advocate for Hellekant, argued that "medical authorities would be remiss if they overlooked the unique, positive characterisistics that a gifted ex-felon might bring to the profession" and suggested that ex-felons might be well-suited to the distinctive demands of providing medical care within the prison system.

 
 

Björn Söderberg, born 1958, was a Swedish union active syndicalist who was murdered in Sätra, Stockholm on October 12, 1999.

Björn Söderberg had made a tip to the newspaper Arbetaren owned by Sveriges Arbetares Centralorganisation (SAC) about his colleague Robert Vesterlund. This tip led to an article in Arbetaren on September 16, 1999 revealing Vesterlund, member of the board of the local union, as a Nazi. As a result of this Robert Vesterlund resigned his job and was forced out of the union.

This was the motive for the two men Hampus Hellekant and Björn Lindberg-Hernlund (both with strong ties to the Nazi organization Nationell Ungdom) who visited Björn Söderberg at his apartment in Sätra on October 12 and shot him to death.

Hampus Hellekant and Björn Lindberg-Hernlund were convicted of murder in the Court of Appeal and Jimmy Niklasson, also a member of Nationell Ungdom, was convicted of “grovt vapenbrott och skyddande av brottsling”.

On October 23, 20.000 people gathered on Medborgarplatsen to take part in an anti-fascist meeting and October 12 was appointed Day of Civil Courage by SAC. On that day a price in civil courage is given in memory of Söderberg’s murder.

Wikipedia.org

 
 

Swedes Ponder Whether Killer Can Be a Doctor

By Lawrence K. Altman - The New York Times

January 25, 2008

STOCKHOLM — The Karolinska Institute here is famed for choosing the winners of the Nobel Prize in Medicine each year, and as one of the world’s most prestigious medical schools it rejects many students with the highest grades.

Last summer, Karl Helge Hampus Svensson, 31, was among the 180 students admitted to the freshman class after receiving top grades in high school and courses he took online over the previous six years.

But last fall, institute officials received two anonymous letters claiming that Mr. Svensson had been a Nazi sympathizer who was paroled from a maximum-security prison after being convicted in 2000 of murder, a killing the police called a hate crime.

After confirming the information, the institute had to decide: should Mr. Svensson be allowed to become a doctor?

There was no legal way to expel Mr. Svensson, because “no national policy covers the situation,” Dr. Harriet Wallberg-Henriksson, the Karolinska’s president, said last month. The only grounds for expulsion would be if he were a threat to others or had a psychiatric illness, she said.

Many doctors, students and officials argued that Mr. Svensson should never get a license because of the trust needed in medicine; others said he had served his time and should be permitted to stay and become a doctor.

On Thursday, after considering the case for months, the Karolinska expelled Mr. Svensson on a technical issue: Mr. Svensson had apparently falsified the name on his high school transcripts.

In re-examining his application forms recently, an institute official noticed that Mr. Svensson’s high school transcript, dated 1995, was under his current surname, Svensson, not what is believed to be his family name, Hellekant. Mr. Svensson changed his name after being convicted of the crime.

“That seemed strange to us, so on Wednesday we asked the national agency responsible for verifying application documents to check,” and they could not verify the transcript, Dr. Wallberg-Henriksson said in a telephone interview on Thursday. “We were under the assumption that they had done it because that’s their responsibility.”

Mr. Svensson offered no protest when another Karolinska official notified him of his expulsion, she said.

Mr. Svensson did not respond to numerous attempts to reach him for this article.

In 2000, Mr. Svensson, then Mr. Hellekant, was convicted of shooting a trade union worker, Bjorn Soderberg, 41, seven times after a loud argument outside Mr. Soderberg’s apartment in a Stockholm suburb on the night of Oct. 12, 1999. Mr. Soderberg had complained about a co-worker who displayed his neo-Nazi beliefs at work, leading to the co-worker’s loss of a job and union position. The co-worker was a friend of Mr. Svensson’s.

At the time of the killing, according to court records and Stockholm police officials, Mr. Svensson was under surveillance for neo-Nazi activities by the Swedish Security Service, the equivalent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Despite the conviction, Mr. Svensson maintained that he did not commit the killing.

After serving 6 1/2 years of an 11-year sentence, Mr. Svensson was released on parole in February 2007. According to Swedish prison standards, inmates are usually released after serving two-thirds of their sentence.

While imprisoned, Mr. Svensson took a number of online courses that met the Karolinska’s high standards. Two admissions committee members interviewed him separately, Dr. Wallberg-Henriksson said. One was a psychiatrist. But neither interviewer detected anything unusual or asked him to explain his activities during the previous six-and-a-half-year period, she said.

She notified Mr. Svensson’s classmates by intranet on Thursday of the decision to expel him. On Friday she said she would address the students, her third meeting with the student body concerning Mr. Svensson’s case.

Dr. Wallberg-Henriksson first met with students last fall to tell them that a convicted murderer was a classmate.

She met with students again when Mr. Svensson identified himself before his classmates. At that meeting, Mr. Svensson spoke for about 10 minutes without apologizing for the murder or his past. He did say, “Today, I am not the person I was 10 years ago,” Dr. Wallberg-Henriksson said.

After Mr. Svensson spoke at that session, Dr. Wallberg-Henriksson said, she discussed the case with his classmates. One group vehemently expressed the view that he deserved to study medicine because he had served his time. But others disagreed, saying they were scared and felt unsafe having him as a classmate.

The proportion of supporters and critics among the speakers was about even, she said, but many who seemed neutral asked for more information.

Dr. Wallberg-Henriksson said that she offered Mr. Svensson and his classmates consultations with faculty members, including psychologists, and that many responded.

Linnea Zetterman, a medical student at Umea University who went through the same 45-minute interview process in applying to Karolinska, said it seemed strange that the interviewers did not question him about the six-and-a-half-year period.

The interviews were “rigid and made you wonder whether you were suited for the profession,” she said.

A number of doctors, writing in a number of recent issues of Lakartidningen, a journal published by the Swedish Medical Association, have argued that Mr. Svensson should not be allowed to become a doctor.

Also, the Swedish licensing body, which has no authority over medical schools, has said it will not grant Mr. Svensson a medical license if he graduates because of the conviction. That view left Karolinska officials in a quandary over whether and how to tell Mr. Svensson’s patients about his past.

When Dr. Wallberg-Henriksson appealed to the Swedish government to resolve the issue, she said she received mixed signals.

Because the expulsion does not resolve how to handle any future such cases, Sweden must determine whether medical schools can admit a convicted murderer, among other issues, she said.

 

 

 
 
 
 
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