From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
On August 23 ,1973 , Jan Erik "Janne" Olsson, on leave
from prison, walked into Kreditbanken at Norrmalmstorg , central
Stockholm. Police were called in immediately, two of them went
inside, and Olsson opened fire, injuring one policeman. The other
was ordered to sit in a chair and "sing something". He
started singing "Lonesome Cowboy". Olsson then took four
people as hostages. He demanded his friend Clark Olofsson to be
brought there, along with 3 million Swedish Krona ($360,000 US
2003 value), two guns, bullet-proof vests, helmets and a fast car.
Olofsson was brought in by permission of the government and established
a communication link with the police negotiators. One of the hostages,
Kristin Ehnemark (not present on the photo), said she was confident
with the robbers but feared the police might cause trouble by violent
methods (this was the beginning of the Stockholm syndrome). The
robbers barricaded the inner main vault together with the hostages.
The doors to the vault were closed. The robbers were permitted
to have a car to escape but were not allowed to take the hostages
with them, if they were to leave.
The robber, Olofsson, called up the Prime Minister Olof Palme
and said he would kill the hostages, and took a stranglehold on
Elisabeth; she was heard screaming as he hung up.
The next day Olof Palme received another call. This time it was
Kristin Ehnmark who said she was very displeased with his attitude,
asking him to let the robbers and the hostages leave.
Olofsson walked around in the vault singing Roberta Flack 's "Killing
me softly".
The drama went on. On August 26 , the police drilled a hole into
the main vault from the apartment above. This was the hole from
which the picture of the hostages and Olofsson was taken. Olsson
opened fire and threatened to kill the hostages if any gas attack
was attempted. He attached small snare traps to the necks of the
hostages which would cause them to strangle themselves in the event
of a gas attack.
On August 28 the gas was used anyway, and after half an hour the
robbers gave up. Nobody was injured physically.
Both Olsson and Olofsson were charged and sentenced to extended
imprisonment for the robbery. However Olofsson claimed he didn't
help Olsson and was only trying to save the hostages by keeping
the situation calm, and at the court of appeals he was freed of
any charges. He was later to become a friend with one of the hostages,
Kristin Ehnemark, and they meet sometimes, their families becoming
friends. Olsson was sentenced to ten years of prison and has not
committed a criminal act since he was released. He got many admiring
letters from women who found him attractive. He later got engaged
to one of them (not one of the hostages, however, as some state).
The hostages still repeatedly claim they were more frightened
of the police than the robbers during their six days of confinement.
They clearly identify with their unlawful guardians. This leads
to academic interest in the matter. The term "Stockholm syndrome" was
coined by criminologist Nils Bejerot .
Clark Olofsson has repeatedly committed armed robberies and acts
of violence, both before and after the events in 1973, all since
he was 16 years old. He was finally released from prison in 1991
, but in 1999 he was arrested in Denmark and was sentenced to another
14 years of prison. He has spent some 24 years in prison.
The most widely publicized myth about the robbery, or rather about
the Stockholm syndrome, was that one or both robbers became engaged
to their captives. This is simply not true, and may stem from the
language barrier: the phrase "engagera sig i någon" in
Swedish , does not mean "to become engaged to someone",
but rather "to care deeply about someone" (this sort
of resemblance between two words in different languages that are
not synonyms is known as a false friend ).
As stated above, Kristin Ehnemark and Clark Olofsson became friends,
and Jan Olsson married one of his female admirers, but there were
no engagements between anyone present during the events.
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