It is Wednesday afternoon in Visby and the politicians' week is in full swing.

The clock is approaching two and the psychiatry coordinator Ing-Marie Wieselgren must rush on to the next panel discussion, she has a tight schedule.

In the live broadcast, you see how she leaves the stage at Hamnplan and disappears from the picture.

From conversations about children's rights in society, to conversations about "the hunt for a diagnosis".

A walk of a few minutes.

But she never arrives.

At Donners Plats, a man attacks with a knife and Ing-Marie Wieselgren signs together in front of shocked witnesses.

A few hours later, she is pronounced dead.

Tackled down

The perpetrator flees up an alley but is tackled by a man who understands that something was wrong.

Police arrest the suspect, a 32-year-old man who is perceived as confused.

Prosecutor Petra Götell is clear the day after the act: the 32-year-old has confessed and Ing-Marie Wieselgren was his target.

Petra Götell describes it as if the attack was "aimed at psychiatry".

The suspect has previously participated in demonstrations with the Nazi Nordic Resistance Movement, NMR, and written for the organization's site Nordfront.

But the prosecutor says that those connections are not the focus of the investigation.

Tents outside Visby

The 32-year-old, who is registered in southern Sweden, arrived on Gotland already last week.

He is said to have lived in a tent just north of Visby until Wednesday.

- The information we have is that he came here himself and that he was himself during this time, says prosecutor Petra Götell.

According to the man's defender Staffan Fredriksson, the 32-year-old kept track of Ing-Marie Wieselgren's schedule during Almedalen Week.

He is then said to have waited for the right opportunity.

- She was the primary goal and he has via the internet kept track of where she would move in Visby and Almedalen.

He has also had alternative plans without them being particularly structured, says Staffan Fredriksson.