
Life Sentences and Long Prison Terms Mark European Rulings on Murder and Femicide
Recent verdicts in Sweden, Germany, Switzerland, and Russia underscore a judicial focus on accountability for premeditated killings and gender-based violence.
Courts in four European countries have handed down severe sentences in the past week for violent crimes, including multiple life imprisonments and a 16.5-year term, reflecting a pattern of judicial emphasis on premeditation and the protection of intimate partners. In Sweden, a 38-year-old man received a life sentence and will be deported after serving his term for the knife murder of his former girlfriend, a crime witnessed by several people and partially captured on film. The court also convicted him of violating a restraining order and making grave threats against a bystander who intervened. Separately, a Swedish court sentenced a man to prison for a fatal shooting that occurred during a drunken evening in Örbyhus, where a pistol was mishandled and an older relative was struck in the back; the shooter initially misled emergency operators about the cause of the injury.
In Russia, the Krasnodar regional court sentenced a 52-year-old man to 16.5 years in a strict-regime penal colony for murder with particular cruelty and the unlawful seizure of a vehicle. According to the regional prosecutor’s office, the convicted man stabbed a 36-year-old woman 26 times on 21 August 2025, driven by a personal grudge linked to a business dispute with her family dating back to 2013. After the killing, he used her car to conceal the crime, later burying her body in a forest. The defendant admitted guilt and stated he would not appeal the verdict.
In Switzerland, the Basel-Landschaft criminal court’s life sentence for the murder of a former model by her 44-year-old husband is now under appeal. The first-instance court found the killing constituted murder, rejecting the defence’s arguments for a lesser charge. Under Swiss law, a life sentence means incarceration until death, with a first review of conditional release possible only after 15 years. The defendant’s legal team has challenged the verdict, and the case will proceed through higher instances. Meanwhile, in Germany, the Aschaffenburg regional court sentenced a 67-year-old man to life imprisonment for the 1984 murder of his 19-year-old ex-girlfriend, Maria Köhler. The prosecution argued the killing was motivated by anger and jealousy after the victim ended the relationship, and the court ruled it was a treacherous murder, not a spontaneous act. The defence had sought acquittal, contending the statute of limitations for manslaughter had expired, but DNA evidence secured from the alleged murder weapon and a renewed cold-case investigation led to the man’s extradition from Turkey last September.
Viewed from European legal institutions, these rulings illustrate a convergence in the treatment of lethal intimate-partner violence and cold cases, with courts increasingly willing to impose maximum penalties when premeditation or particular cruelty is established. German and Swedish legal systems allow for life sentences with a possibility of parole review after a set period, while the Russian sentence combines a murder conviction with an additional property crime charge. The Swiss appeal process will test the evidentiary threshold for murder versus manslaughter. The German verdict is not yet final, and the Russian defendant’s waiver of appeal means that sentence will be enforced. The Swedish life sentence is being served, and the Swiss case awaits a date for the next hearing.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 4 languages
European courts are handing down harsh sentences, including life imprisonment and deportation, to men who murder their former partners. The coverage highlights the brutality of the crimes and frames the rulings as a necessary response to femicide.
In Russia, a man was sentenced to 16.5 years for stabbing a woman 26 times and stealing her car; another case involves the killing of a very small woman over a long-standing grudge. The reports dwell on the gruesome details and the perpetrator's statements, without framing the events as systemic gender violence.
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