Murder Most Foul – July 2018

(vip2019) #1

summer cottage and find us,” she said.
After the attack, Johanna’s mother
had rung the emergency services in a
dramatic 11-minute call that was played
to the court. “I’m bleeding all over from
many wounds,” she said calmly. “I think
my husband is dead in bed. You must
come soon as I will lose consciousness.”
Johanna’s sister added: “I don’t
believe she has feelings in the way
I have feelings. She is cold and
calculating. She says what she needs to
get what she wants. She always has a
plan. She can cry when she thinks it’s
necessary.”
Johanna’s youngest son, aged 13, told
the court his mother had approached
him to provide her with an alibi for the
time of the attack.
Her daughter, 25, said her mother
had asked her and her partner to
dispose of Aki Paasala by hitting him on
the head with a baseball bat. They had,
of course, refused – stunned even at the


idea. “I am 100 per cent sure that my
mother killed my grandfather for the
money. Right now, all I feel is hatred for
her,” she said.
Shortly before the attack on her
parents, Johanna’s life had appeared to
be in free-fall. She had been involved in
a sex scandal in which she was accused
of forcing unaccompanied refugee boys
to have sex with her. The investigation
was dropped but not before her business
partner had decided in disgust to
dissolve the partnership. “I just wanted
to get away from her,” she said.
Johanna blamed Rajabi for the
murder of her father. She had taken
him into her home, she told the court,
but a week before her father’s death she
had told him they couldn’t be married
because her parents and children would
not accept him, she said.
“The night before the murder,”
Johanna added, “Mohammad and
another person visited the summer
house to look around. They were seen.
Isn’t that suspicious?”
Johanna received a life sentence for
the murder of her father and additional
charges that included “incitement” to
murder her husband. With regard to her
father, “[Johanna] Möller’s involvement
was so great and so decisive that she
should, like Mohammad Rajabi, be
considered a perpetrator and not an
instigator or merely complicit,” read the
verdict.
In Sweden, a life sentence is

“I don’t believe she
has feelings in the way
I have feelings. She is
cold and calculating. She
says what she needs to
get what she wants. She
always has a plan”

The summer house in Arboga
where Göran Möller was killed

indeterminate. Parole can be sought
after 10 years. On average, 21 years
is served. Rajabi was sentenced to
14 years, the maximum allowed for
someone under 21. He was also issued
with a deportation order.
During the appeal stage from
November 2017 to January 2018,
Johanna wrote to the court. Oddly, she
referred to herself in the third person
throughout. “Joh has been very worried
about her mother and has on several
occasions asked the police about how
she is. Joh has already written a letter,
but then the mother responded with a
police report and applied for a ban on
contact.” She continued to plead her
innocence. “Joh could not possibly have
been at the summer house address on
August 3rd,” she wrote.
A further insight into Johanna’s
state of mind came from her police
interview. “Do you know what
people say about me?” she said.
“Humble – always happy – always
kidding around – naïve, prepared
to help anyone – too kind for my
own good.”

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110


OUT OCTOBER 25th, 2018


The Poison Mystery

To End Them All

ISSUE
WORLD’S NO.1 TRUE CRIME QUARTERLY http://www.truecrimelibrary.com

MOST FOUL


WENDY’S KILLER UNMASKED

50


YEARS


ON


HE SEDUCED A NUN IN PRISON


COUPLES WHO KILL

End Of The Road For

Sydney Triple-Killer

VICTIM IN THE


MONSTER’S


TORTURE-


CHAMBER


Handcuffed and hogtied...

FROM SOUTH LONDON

“MY AFFAIR WITH


A SERIAL KILLER”


HE CUT HER UP

AND COOKED HER

In The Wake Of Hurricane Katrina

BET TY

WANTED

TO BE A

GUN MOLL
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