The investigation revealed that the suspected packages were sent during August and September last year from different agents in Halmstad and Malmö. A 33-year-old woman from Halmstad was identified through a review of the agents' surveillance cameras, where she was seen wearing a cap, scarf, or sunglasses when leaving the shipments. When police searched her home, more drugs were found, along with zip bags, vacuum bags, gloves with drug residues, a scale, notes, and residues of amphetamine in a larger vacuum bag.
During the trial, the woman admitted that she picked up packages with drugs at various places around Halmstad and then at a friend's home, and she sent all packages except five from a specific agent. She claimed the drugs in her home were only for personal use. In the initial interrogation, she completely denied the crime but later admitted to posting four to ten packages, unaware of the exact content or quantity. She said she got in contact with a person via a group on the Signal app who offered money for her to post packages, and she was in a poor financial situation at the time and therefore took the offer.
I deny everything.
The court believes it is proven that she also posted the five packages from the specific agent, among other things because her payment card was used at the agent at the same time as the packages were submitted. The prosecutor believes that the amount of drugs and the fact that the activity was conducted on a larger scale means the woman is guilty of serious drug offense, and Halmstad District Court agrees with that assessment and convicts her for that crime. The prosecutor also claims that the woman packaged drugs, something she denies, but the court believes it is not excluded that someone else could have packaged the drugs and therefore acquits her from that part of the indictment. She is also convicted for minor drug offense for the drugs found in her home during the house search. A unanimous district court sentences her to prison for two years for these crimes.