Due to a dramatic lack of resources and competence, investigations of sexual offenses against children are being increasingly put off in Sweden. This comes amid a sharp spike in unsolicited contacts with children through social media, reported by all five of the Barnahus offices ("Children's House"), a Nordic multi-disciplinary intra-agency service model to support child victims of violence.
The police themselves have admitted to having problems in keeping up with the investigations.
"In respect to these Internet-related cases, we have a problem today at the police authority across Sweden," head of the domestic violence department at Stockholm police Mats Lindström told Swedish Radio, admitting the increase in various hard-to-catch-up-with types of sexual offenses, in which children are contacted via social media.
At Barnahus Stockholm alone, there are currently 15 pending investigations. This is a significant spike compared to previous years, when two to three investigations were carried out.
Each case consumes time and effort, as the suspects' mobile phones, computers and tablets are seized by investigators. After a thorough search, it is not uncommon for an investigation to spread across the whole nation, encompassing up to 100 children.
One of the reasons for the rise in investigations is that the companies producing the apps the children are using have started to report more suspected cases, Mats Lindström said. "As far as I understand, they have also started to work proactively to remove these men from their pages," he explained.
The rise in the number of notifications have resulted in the police being unable to cope with all the reported cases, as few employees appear to have the necessary qualifications, in addition to the dramatic lack of personnel.
"We need more skills and special resources to target this very type of crime. We are simply not up to par with recent developments," Mats Lindström explained.
This summer, Democracy and Culture Minister Alice Bah Kuhnke ventured that the police should prioritize violence against politicians, journalist and artists, presenting a corresponding action plan.