Stig Millehaugen convicted of double murder is wanted – did not return to prison – NRK Norway – Overview of news from different parts of the country

According to what NRK is informed, a so-called national alarm has been sounded by the police. This means that Millehaugen is internally wanted by the police throughout the country. – This is completely unknown to me, I have not been contacted, says his longtime defender Morten Furuholmen to NRK. In 2012, Millehaugen was sentenced to the law’s most severe punishment of 21 years’ detention and a minimum of ten years for the murder of gang leader Mohammed Jeddi Javed. He was found killed in a burnt-out car at Haugerud in Oslo on the evening of 19 January 2009. He has previously been convicted of killing a prison officer after an escape attempt from prison. Sentenced to prison In July 1992, he escaped from Berg district prison. In August of the same year, he robbed Svartskog post office, and later Nesbru post office, where hostages were taken. In December 1992, while in custody in Sarpsborg, he had a gun smuggled into the prison. He shot and killed a prison officer, and forced another to drive to Oslo. The next day he reported to the police. In August 1993, Millehaugen was sentenced to 17 years in prison for killing prison officer Jon Arild Martinsen and for the two robberies at Svartskog and Nesbru. Escaped several times on April 29, 2011, Millehaugen was sentenced to 21 years in prison, with a minimum term of ten years, for the murder of Javed. A 29-year-old leader of the rival B-gang was convicted of contacting Millehaugen on Facebook and ordering the murder. In October 2000, Millehaugen ran away during leave and escaped with her boyfriend. Eight months later, in June 2001, he was arrested. It was the longest period Millehaugen has been at large since 1988. In 2003, Millehaugen was sentenced to one year in prison for possession of a weapon during the period of the escape. In the same case, he was acquitted of the robbery of the then Kreditkassen’s branch in Bogstadveien in Oslo. Due to fear of escape, Millehaugen spent a long time alone in ward A in Ringerike prison, under the SHS regime.



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