It is described by the prosecutor as a complicated and sensitive case, partly because there is currently no practice for alternative alternative calls for suicide.

It is a new crime since May 2021.

But in the first place, the prosecutor wants the district court to decide whether the woman has been guilty of murder or manslaughter.

- What has happened is mainly investigated, but the question is how it should be assessed legally, says Prosecutor Maria Lundberg during the closing argument.

If the district court finds the woman guilty and convicts her of murder, the prosecutor believes that there should be a prison sentence of between 12 and 14 years.

Denies crime

The woman denies the crime, even though she admits that she gave the disabled man access to a larger amount of prescription medicine, and said that "if you take these, you will become an angel".

He took the tablets and the next day, November 11 last year, he lay dead in his bed in the small croft in Gislaved municipality.

Key issues

A key issue during the district court hearing has been to try to find out if the man really had the ability to understand that he would die if he took the drugs.

Another crucial question is whether he has really expressed that he wanted to commit suicide.

The murder accused woman claims that.

- He has also expressed that he wanted to die, says lawyer Kjell-Åke Lundin.

During the trial, the lawyer tried to show that the man had the ability to think about consequences and make informed decisions.

But it is something that the now dead man's doctor is hesitant about, which is a testimony the prosecutor, among other things, leans towards.

They are tentatively expected to be announced in two weeks.

In the clip above, you hear the prosecutor and the lawyer during the final pleading of the trial.