Tell HN: Sweden has its first arrest against a man for "insult against official"
17 acadapter 11 7/4/2025, 8:05:20 AM
On July 2, it became illegal to phrase insults against publicly employed staff such as police officers, teachers, medical personnel, etc.
A 60 year old man in Sweden was stopped and arrested for both a DUI and the insults he said in conjunction to the police stop. The penalty scale for "insult against official" can be fines or up to 5 months in prison depending on severity.
/r/sweden discussion with news link (in Swedish):
https://old.reddit.com/r/sweden/comments/1lqnxea/f%C3%B6rsta_gripande_f%C3%B6r_f%C3%B6rol%C3%A4mpning_mot_polisen/
Yes, I want people to be able to say "Death to the IDF" (or death to Hamas for that matter).
It's contrary to the human right of freedom of speech. It's bad for all the same reasons that lèse-majesté laws are, but is even worse because its scope is so much broader.
You can however do things like refuse to give evidence to torpedo the court case if you wanted to functionally “drop the charges” but if there’s still a chargable offense in the eyes of the police and credible evidence otherwise then the court case can still proceed regardless of your feelings.
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