In April last year, the man charged in the case was banned from visiting the deceased woman. But the man broke the ban a number of times. A total of ten cases have been opened for violation of the visiting ban, Oslo police district informs. According to the assistance lawyer, Pirashanthy Sivabalachandran, the woman repeatedly asked for a violence alarm and a reverse violence alarm without her being granted it. – She lived in constant fear of the accused’s escalating behavior without this leading to adequate measures from the police, she wrote in a text message to news yesterday. The woman’s family is deeply disappointed by the follow-up the deceased received from the police from the time the first report against the accused man was submitted in April until the tragic outcome. Police inspector Marthe Notøy writes in a press release that the offended woman had asked for a violence alarm, but that the Oslo police district refused the request after an overall assessment. According to Notøy, the risk of violence was assessed as low at the time. The police further write in the press release that a violence alarm can be imposed by the court in connection with a verdict in a criminal case. As the case had not been fully investigated, there was no basis for sounding the alarm. It was on the night of Tuesday that a woman was found shot dead in a car in Elverum. The man charged with the murder was found badly injured in the same car. He was flown to Ullevål hospital, but died of his injuries.
ttn-69