It was when a young woman was taken by the customs in Sundsvall in the process of collecting packages with drugs that the connection to gang criminals in Stockholm was revealed.

One of the packages that the woman picked up contained close to a kilo of cannabis and was sent from Spain. The sender listed on the package had customs and police raise their eyebrows. The name belongs to a 24-year-old man who was arrested in Spain last year. The man was extradited to Sweden and in July 2019 he was sentenced to just over seven years in prison for a particularly serious drug crime.

Bloody conflict

The prosecutor in the drug case said that the man belongs to the network "3MST", or as it is also called "Death Patrol". The gang is involved in a conflict between the rival gang Shottaz in the Järva area. Those involved were former childhood friends, schoolmates and neighbors in Rinkeby and Tensta, but are now part of one of the bloodiest gang conflicts in Sweden.

Recently, Spanish police arrested more members of the "Death Patrol". Pictures published by the Catalan police show, among other things, marijuana plantations and bags of seized drugs.

According to police information that dn.se has read, these people have close ties with the person who gave the Sundsvall woman instructions.

Sundsvall residents convicted

The customs criminal confiscated the drugs in the packages addressed to the Sundsvall woman and spied on her when she picked up the packages. It was then discovered that the woman was being monitored by a man. When he discovered that the drug was missing, he became violent and the customs scouts had to call for help to put her in safety.

Organizers in Sundsvall

The Sundsvall woman stated during the trial that she received a few hundred bucks to pick up the packages. She was sentenced to probation. In another trial, a 24-year-old Sundsvall woman was sentenced to one year and four months in prison for having played a major role in the organization of drug smuggling.

Three young men, the youngest only fifteen years old, were convicted at the same time of drug offenses.