Police arrested the man at 16:10 at the school, where he and his half-siblings had previously been students, according to multiple reports. He had lived almost his entire life at Skaugum, a nearby estate, with his mother, Norway's future queen, and stepfather Haakon, the future head of state. The arrest followed a violent assault and vandalism in a Frogner apartment, where a young woman had just managed to force her ex-boyfriend out the door.
The ex-boyfriend had vandalized the apartment, leaving a chandelier smashed on the floor and destroying several pieces of furniture, a mobile phone, and a pair of headphones. A knife was found stuck into the bedroom wall. During the incident, the ex-boyfriend repeatedly choked the woman so she could not breathe, slapped her in the face with an open hand, and held her down on a bed.
In a separate domestic assault in Gothenburg, police were called to a residence during the night. According to initial reports, a man hit his girlfriend. Both parties and a witness were questioned at the scene, and a man in his 20s was arrested on suspicion of assault.
Official sources said the man is suspected of assaulting his ex-girlfriend with strangulation and blows to the arms. There is currently no information about personal injuries. Additionally, on road 23 through Höör, a man and a woman got into a verbal altercation while driving.
The man began hitting the woman in the head and pulling her hair forcefully, and for a short period, the woman is said to have been unconscious. Witnesses from an unexpected direction were able to alert the police. The relationship between the man and woman in the Höör incident has not been disclosed, and the woman's current condition remains unclear.
Charges filed against the arrested men in each incident have not been confirmed, and authorities have not indicated whether the incidents are connected. The identity of the man arrested at Jansløkka school and his exact relation to the Norwegian royal family have not been officially released.
