Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
However, causing death by jumping on a person's chest and head or firing over 10 times on a person's torso has been deemed to fulfill the standard. [ citation needed ] If the aggravating factors for murder are not fulfilled, but the homicide has been deliberate and premeditated, the convict is sentenced for second degree murder ( tappo ) with a ...
According to Finnish law, murder never expires under the statute of limitations, whereas manslaughter expires after 20 years. [ 3 ] The head of investigation Jussi Luoto stated in November 2022 that the case is not currently being actively investigated, but authorities are responding to both old and new leads as required.
The Oulu child murders is a Finnish murder case, referring to the discovery of the bodies of five infants in the basement of an apartment building in Oulu, on 3 June 2014. The mother of the babies, 35-year-old Kaisa Emilia Vornanen-Karaduman, had concealed the pregnancies and abandoned them, after giving birth at home. The Rovaniemi Court of ...
Finnish murderers of children (8 P) Pages in category "Child murder in Finland" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
The Ulvila homicide (Finnish: Ulvilan surma) occurred in Ulvila, Finland, on December 1, 2006. The victim was 51-year-old Jukka S. Lahti, a social psychologist and father of four. Initially, the police were looking for an outside perpetrator. In September 2009, the victim's widow Anneli Auer was arrested and charged with the murder.
The oven homicide (Finnish: uunisurma) refers to the homicide of Hilkka Hillevi Saarinen née Pylkkänen (b. 1 November 1927 d. 23 December 1960), [1] in the village of Krootila in Kokemäki, Finland in December 1960. It is one of Finland's best-known homicide cases, and the killer has never been officially identified.
Janne Puhakka, the country’s first openly gay hockey player, is believed to have been shot and killed by his estranged husband weeks after breaking off their relationship, according to local police.
Life imprisonment is the only possible penalty for the crime of murder and a possible penalty for treason, espionage, war crimes, genocide, crimes against humanity, and terrorism resulting in death. [1] Under the Finnish criminal code of 1889, life imprisonment consisted of at least 12 years of imprisonment after which the convict was ...