Prison for Warning About Pedophiles – New Law Backed by the Government
From July 3, 2026, fines for aggravated defamation will be abolished. Only prison remains for those who warn their neighbors that a convicted pedophile has moved in.
On July 3, 2026, a major legal reform takes effect, increasing penalties for about fifty crimes – including aggravated defamation. For this specific offense, the option of fines will be completely removed. The penalty will solely be prison, with a minimum sentence of one month and a maximum of two years.
The result? Investigative journalism and citizens with civic courage will find themselves in the crosshairs – especially when powerful activists feel offended.
This is a direct hit against free speech.
The truth doesn’t matter
A fundamental – and for many, shocking – feature of Sweden’s defamation laws is that the truth of a statement does not determine its legality. A publication can be entirely accurate, documented, and fact-based, yet still be considered defamation if it’s judged to damage someone’s reputation and is not deemed justifiable in context.
Conversely, a false claim can avoid punishment, provided the court believes the intent was sufficiently justified. This legal logic effectively shifts power from facts to interpretation.
The result is a system where subjective judgments become decisive. Judges, lay judges, and press freedom juries – often with neither journalistic experience nor common sense – are granted the power to determine what is “defensible” to publish.
For investigative journalists or ordinary citizens warning their neighborhood about a newly arrived pedophile, this creates a constant legal uncertainty. Truth is not protection. Instead, the law becomes a tool that can be selectively used – against those who expose the wrong people.
The Mats Dagerlind case: A cautionary tale
The conviction of Samnytt’s editor-in-chief Mats Dagerlind is a textbook example of how Sweden’s defamation laws have become a legal minefield.
In February 2024, he was sentenced to one month in prison for aggravated defamation and two counts of defamation – after publishing a screenshot from a public court document. The statement concerned the person behind the controversial project “Näthatsgranskaren” (The Hate Speech Investigator), which for years systematically reported citizens for “hate speech” – often in connection to criticism of mass immigration and population replacement policies.
Despite the man receiving public funding, participating in public service programming, and conducting politically motivated campaigns against individuals, the Court of Appeals ruled he was not public enough to warrant scrutiny. The Chancellor of Justice (JK) had previously declined to prosecute three times – but the man pursued a private lawsuit, funded by his own means.
The Press Freedom Jury acquitted Samnytt on most counts, but the appeals court hardened the sentence: the prison term remained, and damages were doubled to 40,000 SEK. The reasoning? The publication had wide reach, Dagerlind had not “guided” readers enough in his presentation of the material – and the scrutinized individual was thus deemed to have been subjected to undue violation.
This case clearly illustrates how the law does not protect the vulnerable – but is instead used to silence scrutiny of powerful, taxpayer-funded leftist activists.
Warned neighbors about a pedophile – convicted of aggravated defamation
In a viral Instagram post, Josef from Västergötland describes how he was ordered to pay 33,000 SEK in damages – for warning neighbors in a local Facebook group that a convicted pedophile had moved into the area.
But this was something the Swedish justice system could not tolerate. Josef was convicted of aggravated defamation. His intent to prevent abuse didn’t matter.
And Josef is far from alone. He is just another example of how ordinary people who take societal responsibility risk being punished, while the justice system targets those who issue warnings – not those who should be warned about.
Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson did publish an op-ed in Expressen, where he and the government expressed a desire to review defamation laws – including making it possible to warn neighbors if a convicted pedophile moves into the area.
But no concrete legislative proposal exists. And the upcoming toughening of penalties is being implemented without any changes. This means the very people the Prime Minister now praises in words will, in practice, risk prison.
All online defamation is already considered “aggravated”
The government justifies the tougher penalties by pointing to digitalization: rumors, suspicion, and offensive content now spread at lightning speed via platforms like Facebook, X (Twitter), and Instagram. The previous minimum penalty for aggravated defamation – fines – is no longer seen as reflecting the “serious violation of integrity” that can occur in a digital public sphere where distribution is both immediate and vast.
But in reality, almost all online defamation is already classified as aggravated, precisely due to its reach. The legal reasoning does not depend on actual harm or factual accuracy – but how many people saw it.
Ebba Busch behind bars?
This makes the government’s stance even more remarkable when considering a concrete example: Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch herself has been convicted of aggravated defamation.
She published an excerpt from a legal document during a heated real estate dispute in 2021. For this, she was sentenced to a conditional sentence and 60 day-fines of 1,000 SEK each – totaling 60,000 SEK. By confessing, she avoided trial and later used the ruling to boost her political image – as a bold and fearless politician.
But under the new legislation, which her own government is now pushing through, she would not have been able to avoid prison. Starting July 3, 2026, a conviction for aggravated defamation entails at least one month of unconditional prison, regardless of whether the act involved quoting a public document.
That raises a very reasonable question:
How does Ebba Busch, now one of the government’s top figures, view the fact that she herself – under her own government’s proposal – would have been sentenced to prison for exactly the same action?
Sweden heading toward UK-style censorship
In the UK, over 12,000 people are arrested annually for “offensive” online posts. Few are imprisoned, but the trend is clear: politically sensitive topics are policed, often under the guise of combating hate and disinformation.
Sweden is heading in the same direction – but in silence. Politicians like to talk about protecting “individual integrity,” while in practice restricting the right to scrutinize those in power.
So what sets Sweden apart from authoritarian states like Russia?
Not freedom of expression – but the fact that we hide censorship behind legal technicalities.
In Russia, the president silences critics.
In Sweden, an activist prosecutor trained in gender studies is enough.
The end result is the same: self-censorship, fear – and a legal system where both journalists and responsible citizens risk punishment.
Christian Peterson



