As if his new life in a Swedish prison for allegedly hacking the tax records of Swedish company Logica weren’t bad enough, The Pirate Bay co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm Warg (“anakata” to his pirate friends) is now facing additional suspicions of aggravated fraud and attempted aggravated fraud. While the they are currently considered only “suspicions” and not “charges,” that’s all officials need to detain someone indefinitely because that’s how they do things in Sweden.
Under Swedish law, suspects can be held under the suspicion of crimes without actually being charged as long as a judge reviews the case every two weeks. The judge can then decide whether the suspect goes free or not, but considering Warg has been in jail since September of this year on previous charges, he can probably expect to be disappointed every two weeks by the judge’s decision.
The good news for Warg is that his current detention can not exceed his original sentence of ten months, and his current incarceration counts as timed served towards the sentence. The bad news is that prisons, even Swedish ones, are notoriously unfavorable places to spend any real length of time.
(via Ars Technica)
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Published: Nov 12, 2012 02:55 pm