Isakin Drabbad

Isakin Daniel Drabbad (born Jimmy Daniel Isaksson, later named Isakin Jonsson; 14 October 1978), also known as the Skara Cannibal (Skarakannibalen), is a Swedish convicted murderer. In November 2010 in Skara, he murdered his girlfriend Helle Christensen and ate parts of her body. He was committed to a mental health institution.

During his time at the institution, Drabbad has sparked several controversies that created headlines both in Sweden and internationally. In December 2011, he got engaged to what the media called the Vampire Woman, Michelle Gustafsson, a murderer in her own right and an inmate of the same psychiatric hospital. Together, they mockingly blogged about their committed crimes from the psychiatric hospital's computer, which gave rise to a motion in the Swedish parliament to stop Internet use for patients in Swedish psychiatric institutions.

In 2017, Drabbad made headlines again after selling voodoo dolls and other art containing blood and bodily fluids online from inside the hospital. He has also posted several clips of himself on YouTube filmed in the hospital grounds and during his furloughs. In the same year, he made big headlines when it was reported that Drabbad had been together with carers inside Karsudden Hospital in Katrineholm. Drabbad was denied furlough to marry the woman, who resigned and was placed under a restraining order as she was considered a security risk. Drabbad is still being cared for in forensic psychiatric care, but since 2020 is registered at an address in Katrineholm.

Background
Isakin Jonsson was born Jimmy Daniel Isaksson on 14 October 1978 in Köping, Sweden and moved to Västerås at the age of two. He was in and out of institutions during his upbringing. He has been guilty of drug offenses and theft several times. It have happened in several locations in southern and central Sweden. When Jonsson committed the murder in 2010, he had a nine-year-old daughter. The daughter, Jamie-Lee, later wrote the book Skarakannibalens dotter ("The Cannibal's Daughter") about her upbringing.

Jonsson met Helle Christensen in 2009 when they were both patients at a psychiatric clinic in Borås. They both had checkered pasts with mental health issues and both had criminal convictions. They had limited contacts with the labor market. Christensen had five children, all living with their fathers. Christensen and Jonsson shared different homes and moved from Borås to Skara in the fall of 2010. The three bedroom apartment, which was located at Valhallagatan 13 D in Skara, was rented by Jonsson's mother. The apartment was sparsely furnished and contact was made with the social service in Skara about grants for home equipment. Jonsson and Christensen had plans to live as cohabitants in the future and possibly start a tattoo and piercing shop in the apartment.

Christensen's sister told the media that Jonsson had a violent temper, that she often had to go and pick up her sister after they argued. Christensen is said to have reported that he never hurt her even though she showed up with bruises or on one occasion broke her leg in three places. During the preliminary police investigation after the murder, the police found Christensen's diary, which gave a different picture of the boyfriend. It was written shortly before the murder and describes how scared Christensen was, but that she did not dare to tell her loved ones. She wrote that Jonsson was a different person and that "he talks about punishments, about all the evil." She also describes his bad moods, personality changes and aggressiveness, but notes: "I can handle it because I love him." Shortly before the murder, however, she contacted a woman at a local library near her home and asked for help in finding a hostel where she could feel safe. But the librarian had to promise not to call the police. In his statement during the trial, public prosecutor Lars Johansson mentioned that Christensen would start a new life in Skara and, among other things, start a tattoo and piercing shop. The plan was that they would live together in the future.

Murder of Helle Christensen
Jonsson murdered Christensen in Skara on 12 November 2010. On the day of the murder, the couple got up at noon and got dressed. They then went out shopping. Jonsson bought four beers and Jägermeister at Systembolaget and Christensen bought food at the local Ica store Munken.

They were alone in the apartment until the murder, which happened between 17:00 and 19:00. Christensen at one point went to lie down on a mattress to rest or read. Jonsson then allegedly took a knife, cut the mattress, sat over Christensen's shoulders and slit her throat. Jonsson then dampened the blood flow with a pillow. Christensen did not have time to resist. Death occurred rather immediately. Jonsson then cut Christensen's pants, panties, shirt and bra. He had an erection and then penetrated Christensen but did not ejaculate. With a knife, saw and ax, Jonsson separated Christensen's head from the body. He also cut off pieces of flesh from one of her arms and legs, which he carried into the kitchen to cook. In a frying pan, the pieces of flesh were prepared with salt and home grown cannabis leaves. Jonsson also carried Christensen's head out to the kitchen counter and processed it with an ax and knife, possibly to eat it.

After the murder, Jonsson called the police and confessed. In the emergency call, he says: "When you get here, you don't have to jump on me, I'm as calm as can be." Furthermore, he said in the emergency call that "I want to do the right thing for myself. What I have done now, I have no idea that I have actually done it, but I have woken up".

Investigation
During the first police interrogation, Jonsson said that he was most dangerous when he did not take his medication. Furthermore, he has said that there was a bit of a fight on the day of the murder and he could not explain what triggered the rage against his girlfriend. In the interrogation, which was held the day after the murder, he tried to explain: "I can be perceived as unaffected, but when it happened yesterday I was in someone else's guise. Someone else acted in me." About why he cut off his partner's head, dragged it out into the kitchen and put it on the sink, Jonsson explained that "Why I have no idea. It felt like there were several people in the room. It's almost like a movie is playing".

Jonsson was arrested on 14 November 2010 at a hearing in Skövde police station, on probable grounds suspected of murder. The following day, Skaraborg District Court decided that he would undergo a major examination conducted by a forensic psychiatrist. The analysis of the blood sample taken at the time of the arrest was carried out by the Swedish National Board of Forensic Medicine and showed that Jonsson had 1.35 per mille ethanol in his blood and 4.1 micrograms of tramadol per gram of blood. Tramadol is classified as a narcotic in Sweden.

During a search of the apartment, several findings were made connected to the murder. A frying pan from the kitchen - and several horror movies on DVD. Among a large number of titles were films such as the Green River Killer (2005) and The Wonderland Murders.

Large parts of the investigation were classified.

Trial and verdict
On 11 March 2011, the trial against Jonsson began in Skaraborg District Court. Jonsson had then already confessed to the murder and the major forensic psychiatric examination he underwent showed that he suffered from a serious mental disorder. Among other things, he had hallucinations. He was brought into the courtroom with his hands cuffed along with guards and his lawyer Tore Brandtler. The hearing was held in the district court's special security room, room 5, - and a glass pane separated Jonsson from the audience and journalists.

Lawyer Tore Brandtler said that Jonsson was psychotic when the police arrived at the apartment but was able to tell what happened. What he had in his body he had taken after the murder. He had only had a few beers before. Furthermore, Brandtler stated that there was no motive beyond the serious mental disorder and about the motive that it was voices that made him do it. When the prosecutor then went through the photos from the crime scene and the autopsy, it happened behind closed doors. Journalists and the other audience members were allowed to leave the courtroom. When the emergency call was played in court, Jonsson did not move a muscle.

Jonsson was convicted of murder and sentenced to forensic psychiatric care with special discharge review at Karsudden Hospital in Katrineholm. He was also ordered to pay SEK 75,000 each in damages to Christensen's parents, as well as SEK 75,000 in damages to each of her five children.

Initial hospital time
In the fall of 2011, it was reported that Jonsson refused to take his medication for several months. This was evident from a medical report by chief physician Jan Golebiowski to the Administrative Court of Linköping in Linköping. The report also showed that during the first time at the psychiatric hospital, Jonsson mostly kept to himself, but that he then moved around the ward and socialized with other inmates. He did strength training and was allowed to regularly go for walks around the hospital with carers.

New girlfriend
At Karsudden Hospital, he met Michelle Gustafsson, known in the media as the Vampire Woman. Gustafsson was convicted of slitting the throat of 24-year-old father Daniel Stenman in Jakobsberg in 2010. Before the murder, she had written threatening texts on her blog about how she was going to cut the throats of people in the Stockholm Metro. She also posed for pictures, like a vampire, with bloody lips, knives and a chainsaw. They became a couple on 13 November 2011 after Jonsson asked in a chat on Windows Live Messenger that "Will you be my girl?". They then got engaged on 9 December. The relationship with Gustafsson (who according to a judgment from the administrative court in March 2017 has non-institutional psychiatric care) ended in 2017.

Blogging, YouTube and art selling
On 23 February 2012, Borås Tidning reported how Jonsson and Gustafsson mockingly blogged about their committed crimes from a hospital computer. The newspaper also reported how offensive the victim's little sister found it. A chief medical officer may only decide to restrict internet use for an individual inmate under very restrictive circumstances and the decision may apply for a maximum of 2 months at a time. A motion to prevent this (2016/17:855) was submitted to the Swedish parliament by Sweden Democrats Kent Ekeroth and Per Ramhorn in October 2016. On the blog, Jonsson had answered questions from readers and expressed that he is indifferent to what society thinks of him and his crime: "Most people say at some point in their life that they would never take someone else's life, but have you done it it's not a big deal anymore".

In April and May 2016, Jonsson published several video clips on YouTube where Jonsson, who filmed himself while speaking into the camera in broken English, talks about how he is "fighting for survival" and that "the meaning of life is survival, nothing more. Because if you don't survive, you're dead. I'd rather have that philosophy, because it means I never have to doubt what's right and what's wrong in life. As long as I know I'm fighting for my survival. I have been in such a mental state in my life because of drugs and so that I've been sure I've seen devils and angels and aliens and everything. But even then, when I look back at the most "fucked up trip" you can imagine, I gave up." In one of the clips on Youtube, he says "I'm not a racist. Or I am a racist. I hate everyone, except a few people in the world. So I'm a racist against the human species, if you want to label me. I see me myself as anti-human. There's nothing about humans that I like. The only people in history who have any sense as I see it are the Vikings, the Spartans and people like that." In another one of the films, recorded outside an Ica store, he talks at length about his great interest in art, which he is said to have developed during his time in forensic psychiatric care.

In 2017, Katrineholms-Kuriren and Aftonbladet reported that Jonsson sold his own Voodoo dolls and macabre works of art directly from the hospital. The Voodoo dolls were made from toilet paper, toothpicks and sewing thread. In the heads of the dolls were blood, hair and semen from Jonsson himself. He has also made masks that have been displayed on various sites along with several different works of art and paintings. Several were made from his own blood and signed in English with, "They call me Skara Cannibal".

Furloughs and name change
In 2015, it was reported that Jonsson had a four-hour furlough in Katrineholm every week.

In May 2016, it was reported that Jonsson had been granted a three-day furlough from Karsudden Hospital. He would partly help a relative move, partly go to a summer wedding. The chief medical officer who applied to the administrative court for Jonsson to be granted more furloughs wrote in a submission that "the care has been unproblematic. He has had a stable mental status without relapse into drug abuse. All furloughs have gone without complications. The goal is that he will gradually receive increased furloughs to his apartment and when the period involves several overnight stays, during the furlough he will have contact with a non-institutional psychiatric care clinic". During the period of care, Jonsson has, among other things, been given his own apartment, where he was previously granted furlough. Now he would be granted additional freedoms through a three-day furlough during the month of June. The administrative court stopped the chief medical officer's wish for Jonsson to also be granted two days' furlough. The prosecutor did not like Jonsson's extended freedom outside the hospital and wrote that "In light of the risk of recidivism in very serious crime, there is no reason to grant additional furloughs. Even the plaintiffs for the crime that Isakin Jonsson committed have partially opposed more furloughs." In June 2016, however, Jonsson was granted a three-day furlough, during which he helped a relative move - and attended a wedding. However, he was denied two days' furlough at the same time.

In the fall of 2016, Jonsson changed his surname to Drabbad. The name change had been prompted by great anger from Jonsson. The anger was directed at the administrator at the National Swedish Patent and Registration Office (PRV). "Hey you fucking idiot," Jonsson began his handwritten letter to the administrator, dated October 2016. In the letter, Jonsson wrote that his first wish was to change to the surname Isaksson. A few days before the letter was written, PRV had decided that it could not be approved, according to an order. Isakin wrote "I have paid money for you to do your job. I, Isakin Jonsson, want to change my surname from Jonsson to the newly formed surname Drabbad". He wrote the latter in capital letters. "Make sure and do your damn job because I won't give in and let this go until I get my way. You're messing with the wrong guy," Jonsson concluded. The name change was approved, but the angry letter played a role when, in early 2017, Isakin Drabbad's doctor applied for a three-day furlough for him together with a relative. The prosecutor objected to the application in a statement to the administrative court with the words: "In connection with an examination at the National Swedish Patent and Registration Office, he has acted very inappropriately and threateningly towards an administrator". The prosecutor also wrote that Drabbad "still exhibits an aggressive and abnormal behavior when someone goes against him". Both the administrative court and the Administrative Court of Appeal in Jönköping in Jönköping rejected Drabbad's furlough application. Drabbad was considered by the chief medical officer at Karsudden Hospital near Katrineholm to have completed treatment and that he no longer had a psychotic diagnosis and was in the process of being discharged. In the administrative court, however, the chief doctor was supported by an expert doctor who said that Drabbad was considered to have been treated and that he already had many "exempt benefits". The doctor also believed that the risk of recidivism in serious crime was low and that the prosecutor placed "too much emphasis on historical matters". However, as said, the permission application was rejected by both courts.

In the spring of 2017, the decision was made that Drabbad would continue to be cared for and that he would be denied non-institutional psychiatric care. Drabbad considered that he had been medically treated and wanted the treatment to end. He was first rejected by the administrative court and in April 2017 also by the administrative court of appeals. According to the chief medical officer and the prosecutor, Drabbad still suffered from a mental disorder and there was a risk that he would relapse into crime.



In the summer of 2017, Drabbad applied for a supervised furlough to the Katrineholm City Hall in order to marry his new girlfriend. In the decision that the Administrative Court of Linköping in Linköping made, apart from himself, hospital staff, two witnesses and the girlfriend would be present. The girlfriend had worked as a carer at Karsudden Hospital and the relationship came to the knowledge of the hospital management after it was repeatedly informed that the carer's "relationship with the patient was more intense and closer than what constitutes a professional relationship". The days after the hospital management began to get wind of the relationship, the woman chose to resign - and was subsequently classified as a "security risk". In mid-July 2017, the carer was called to a meeting with management. During the meeting, she stated that she only had a professional relationship with Drabbad. A few days later, the woman chose to terminate her employment. After that, she and Drabbad had close telephone contact and she requested to visit him. Then, according to the judgment, a new meeting was held with her. She admitted at this meeting to a friendly relationship between her and the patient but did not confirm any love relationship. She did, however, confirm that she could conceivably serve as a future furlough destination address for Drabbad.

The Södermanland County Council chose to give the woman visiting restrictions. Had she not voluntarily chosen to end her employment, she would have been suspended from work during the ongoing investigation. According to the hospital management, she posed a security risk if she was allowed to meet Drabbad. In the judgment, the administrative court considered the restrictions justified because of "her knowledge of the hospital's routines and the risk that she participates in the introduction of unauthorized objects or in other way can conceivably assist the patient in the event of a release or escape". The fact that she had knowledge of confidential information about other patients also played a role in the county council's decision, which she chose to appeal. In her appeal, she revealed that it certainly concerned more than friendship. She stated that Drabbad was her boyfriend/fiancé and that she had not received any explanation as to why she was refused to visit him. The Administrative Court of Linköping chose to follow the county council's line and the visiting restrictions remained.

In addition, the court rejected Drabbad's wish to go to Katrineholm so that they could get married. In the administrative court's decision, it was stated that the chief medical officer rejected the application and stated, among other things, the following: The application concerned an accompanied trip and was therefore not interpreted as an application to be examined by the administrative court. Karsudden Hospital did not object to Drabbad's wishes to enter into marriage. However, the activity was not considered a care activity and personnel resources were not allocated for the purpose. The woman that Drabbad planned to marry, the administrative court's decision said, "has recently received a decision to restrict access to Isakin Drabbad".

In October 2017, a document was received by the Administrative Court of Linköping. In it, Drabbad's doctor wrote that the girlfriend has not been allowed to visit Drabbad since July 2017, something that, according to his doctor, he reacted strongly to. In his notes, the chief doctor wrote that it is deemed to have given rise to "further frustration for the patient". Drabbad's furloughs to his own apartment had previously ended. In connection with that, he allegedly used illegal substances and interrupted a drug treatment. The doctor wrote that "the patient today denies these drug-related activities and does not participate in constructive conversations in the spirit of relapse prevention". The risk that Drabbad would relapse into using illegal substances is deemed to have increased "Which would increase the risk of aggressive impulse breakthroughs". Furthermore, the doctor wrote in his notes that "due to the circumstances described above, release or furloughs are deemed not to be appropriate at the moment".