Janne Rani is interviewed in the Motives of Deadly Violence series.
Janne Raninen says on TV that he started committing crimes in the suburbs of Stockholm with burglaries and burglaries when he was 12–13 years old. Mikko Huisko
Crime reporter Sofia Yohannes meet in the Swedish series Motives for deadly violence Born in Sweden in 1977 to Finnish parents Janne Raninen. He has been convicted of two murders to which he has confessed. According to the program, Raninen has spent a total of 24 years in prison.
Yohannes wants to interview Rani, who currently lives in Finland, because he has never before interviewed a person convicted of murder who has confessed to his crime. Raninen tells about the events quite frankly.
– I raised a gun and executed him, Raninen, for example, goes through the events of February 1998 at Stockholm’s Solvalla race track.
In 2003, Raninen participated in a murder for hire in Helsinki’s Vuosaari. He got parole in 2021. On TV, Raninen also opens up about this second murder.
Sofia Yohannes asks Janne Raninen on TV what life is like in criminal circles. – Unhealthy, Raninen replies and urges everyone to stay away from the circles. Over
Yohannes has a hard time dealing with everything he hears.
– Meeting Raninen felt special. It seemed strange that he would share his experiences with criminal gangs. He looked like an ordinary person, Yohannes wonders.
– Raninen talks about killing as if it were a matter of course. I started to think about how the creators sort of separate themselves from their work, he analyzed.
In the end, it is difficult for Yohannes to judge whether Raninen has been completely honest in the meeting.
– I can’t say if he regretted his actions, Yohannes doubts.
– He expressed remorse, but I can’t say if it felt genuine.
Motives of deadly violence today on Teema & Femi at 10.10 pm & in Areena. See all TV programs and broadcast times in Telku’s TV guide.

