It is Prosecutor Frida Molander who has written to the State Prosecutor and requested that the judgment of the High Court be appealed to the Supreme Court.

- What I want to try is whether the amount of explosives, 4.2 kilos, is classified as a serious violation of the law on explosive goods or not. I think that's it.

In the district court, a 40-year-old man was sentenced to five points for imprisonment for three years and six months for, among other things, possession of 4.2 kilos of explosives and a large number of detonators.

The High Court then changed the sentence to prison for two years and three months. On the one hand, the High Court exempted the 40-year-old from the suspicions of money laundering, but the High Court also held that possession of the explosives should be regarded as a crime of the normal degree.

By May 12, the National Prosecutor must have appealed to the Supreme Court