

Kriminalarkivet med Pops och Lampers
The Laserman
People with dark hair or dark skin were randomly selected as victims when Lasermannen, John Ausonius, in the early 1990s shot and killed a person and injured another ten in Stockholm and Uppsala. After one of the largest police manhunts in the country, he was arrested in 1992 and was eventually sentenced to life imprisonment for murder, attempted murder, and a long series of bank robberies. In four episodes, Lasse Lampers and André Pops tell the dramatic story.
Where to Watch Kriminalarkivet med Pops och Lampers • The Laserman
4 Episodes
- A trembling red dot
E1A trembling red dotIt began with a small red dot and a number of brutal shootings that filled early-1990s Sweden with fear. In four episodes, André Pops and Lasse Lampers depict the year when eleven people became victims in a series of racially motivated attacks—giving rise to one of Sweden’s most notorious criminal names—Lasermannen (“the Laser Man”). - The first fatality
E2The first fatalityDespite the fact that four people, all with a foreign background, were shot and seriously injured during the autumn of 1991, the attacks have not received much attention in the media. But that is about to change on the evening of November 8, when Lasermannen strikes with what is, until then, his most brutal act. André Pops and Lasse Lampers portray the dramatic year when eleven people became victims in a series of racially motivated attacks. - Hunting a killer
E3Hunting a killerAfter a murder and four attempted murders in the autumn of 1991, the police are left stomping about without any trace of the suspected Lasermannen. At the same time, concern among immigrants in Sweden grows as demands intensify that politicians should take a firm hand against the wave of violence, racism, and xenophobia. Then, all of a sudden, another series of ruthless shootings begins. - Reclaiming your life
E4Reclaiming your lifeLasermannen was arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment, a sentence he is still serving. He left behind a multitude of ruined human lives, but also many people who were determined to reclaim what they had lost. One of them is Mustafa, who was six years old when his father was shot and left permanently injured by Ausonius. Today, Mustafa tours with his own theatre production, “Who Was My Father?”
