Harriette Broman remand isolation
An Aftonbladet interview reports that Harriette Broman spent 556 days in remand detention with restrictions in a major narcotics case. The rendered page and raw response preserve the article published in 2014.
Broman was confined alone for 23 hours a day, with contact limited to her lawyer, guards, and interrogators. She was convicted in the district court and fully acquitted by the court of appeal on 5 July 2012. The article reports severe weight loss, panic attacks, and continuing nightmares.
This appears to be the case behind the recollection of a woman held for about two years under full restrictions before being found innocent. The documented period is 556 days, or about eighteen months, not two years. The case illustrates the consequence of a false accusation but does not by itself prove the purpose for which restrictions were imposed.
It grounds the coercion analysis in Swedish remand detention and restrictions.