The Bureau has decided – no grounds for criminal liability – news Norway – Overview of news from various parts of the country

The case will now be dismissed with no criminal charges. – There is no basis for claiming that someone has deliberately withheld this information or deliberately contributed to incorrect information to the public prosecutor, and then later to the readmission commission. So this has been dismissed as no criminal offence, says Terje Nybøe, head of the Special Unit to news. The Bureau has since investigated whether criminal offenses were committed in the Baneheia investigation. The Bureau’s investigation has been aimed at former crime chief Arne Pedersen and the Agder police district as an enterprise. Several witness and suspect interviews have been carried out in the case, the Bureau states. news has been in contact with Arne Pedersen. He does not wish to comment on the decision of the Bureau. Accusations of abuse Last week, the Attorney General asked that Viggo Kristiansen should be acquitted in the Baneheia case, for which he served 21 years. – I would like to strongly apologize for the injustice that has been committed, said Jørn Sigur Maurud. At the same time as the reopened case has been investigated by the Oslo police district, unknown information has come to light which has caused the Bureau of Police Affairs to investigate the Agder police district. At the beginning of August, the Bureau announced that they are investigating the police district for possible service errors. The background is a previous criminal case against Jan Helge Andersen that was investigated in 2009. When preparing the reinstatement petition, Agder police district did not inform about this. In February, news wrote about this case and another case, where allegations of abuse have been made against Andersen. It was instead stated that there was no information that Andersen had previously assaulted adults or children: “There is no information that Andersen has previously assaulted either adults or children, or that he has behaved threateningly or violently. He is also not referred to by anyone as aggressive, sexually explicit or as particularly concerned with minor children,” the state attorney in Agder wrote to the commission. The investigation has looked at whether incorrect information was provided to the Agder state prosecutor’s office and the Re-admission Commission intentionally or grossly negligently. In one of the cases, NOK 200,000 was paid in victim compensation to a woman. The incident must have happened in the 1990s, when Andersen was below the criminal minimum age. When news mentioned the accusations, none of the former or current leaders in Agder wanted to comment either. The new information caused the public prosecutor in Agder to react. – It is very unfortunate that the state prosecutors did not receive information from the Agder police district about a dismissed case against Jan Helge Andersen that concerned a crime of immorality in connection with Viggo Kristiansen’s petition for reopening, said first state prosecutor Erik Erland Holmen to news. The information was not forwarded to the Re-admission Commission, when Viggo Kristiansen requested that his case be reopened. This endorsement from the state attorney was central to the investigation, the Bureau said today. “The investigative material did not give the Bureau grounds to conclude that punishable service errors had been committed,” they write in the recent decision. – The relationship was forgotten. No one reflected on the relevance to the sexual offence. They did not reflect on the fact that this could be relevant, says Nybøe about the abuse allegations that became known against Jan Helge Andersen after he was convicted in the Baneheia case. Arne Pedersen led the investigation into the Baneheia case. In an interview with news this spring, the former head of the investigation said that he still believes the verdict from 2002 is correct. As is well known, Viggo Kristiansen was found guilty, but last week the Attorney General asked the Court of Appeal to acquit the 43-year-old.



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