Millionaire's mails revive interest in Sweden PM homicide cold case

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - The unsolved 1986 homicide of Prime Minister Olof Palme is front page news again in Sweden after newspapers published excerpts of emails written by millionairess Eva Rausing before her death saying she knew who was behind his killing.

Palme was gunned down as he walked along the pavement late on February 28 after a visit to the cinema in the center of Stockholm with his wife. A petty criminal was found guilty of the crime in 1989 but was released later that year on appeal.

Rausing's emails have revived interest in a case which has long haunted Sweden and become a symbol of police incompetence.

Daily Aftonbladet led with the news on its front page on Wednesday with a banner headline of "Rausing's mail about the Palme Killing".

It described how Rausing, whose decomposed body was found hidden in her London home in July, said in the emails to a local journalist that the person who instigated the crime was a Swedish businessman.

The journalist, Gunnar Wall, who has written two books on the Palme's homicide and who provided the emails to the Swedish media, declined to give Reuters the name of the man suspected by Rausing.

The mails were also found by British police on Rausing's computer, said Varg Gyllander, a spokesman for Sweden's National Criminal Police.

He said Kerstin Skarp, the prosecutor in charge of the ongoing investigation into Palme's death, had held a meeting with police on the case last week to discuss what to do.

The outcome of the meeting was secret, he said. "All information is taken seriously and investigated."

In a statement, Skarp said Rausing had contacted the Palme investigation and confirmed that Swedish authorities had received information from the British.

Wall said Rausing had written that she had got the name of the person suspected to be behind the crime from her husband, Hans Rausing, one of the heirs to the $ 10 billion Tetra Pak packaging fortune.

Wall contacted the prosecution authority after Rausing's death as she had said she feared for her life because of the information she was privy to.

"She was scared that she would be killed by the person she had identified," he said. "She said if she died in an unexpected way, she wanted me to look into it."

Rausing's husband was given a 10-month suspended jail sentence this month for preventing the lawful and decent burial of his wife, who had died two months before her body was discovered showing signs of cocaine and other drugs use.

Wall said Rausing had provided no evidence for her belief.

"It wasn't the kind of information which made me think, 'Here is the answer,' it was more that there could be something in it (which deserved to be looked at)," he said.

Many leads were investigated by police after the homicide, including one that Kurdish separatists were responsible.

Other theories have included right-wing police officers, businessmen linked to weapons deals, the CIA intelligence agency, the South African apartheid government and the secret service of the former Yugoslavia.

(Reporting by Simon Johnson and Karolin Schaps; Editing by Jon Hemming)

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Edinburgh and East - Wed, 23 May, 2012

Juries in homicide trials could be told about the accused's previous convictions, under radical plans being put forward for a change in the Scottish legal system. The Scottish Law Commission is recommending the move but critics fear it puts at risk the presumption of innocent until proven guilty. In other news: A man who judges ruled was not a danger to society has been sentenced to life in prison for the rape of three women and the assault of two young girls; The former Labour Home Secretary Lord John Reid has told the Leveson Inquiry that he was in the dark about the initial police investigation into phone hacking at the News of the World. Former Hearts midfielder Ian Black has told STV he had to rely on 'mental strength' to get through some of the darker days at Tynecastle. He's a free agent and on the look out for a new club after being released by Hearts at the end of the season. The midfielder will under go a hernia operation next week and while he's yet to pin down a club, he says he's open to offers within the SPL or south of the border.

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