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The Sun
18 hours ago
- The Sun
My Satan-obsessed cannibal dad chopped up my stepmum & cooked her in salt – I'll never get over her chilling last words
SITTING down for a tense dinner as her dad skulked out of sight, Jamie-Lee Arrow had a sickening feeling in her gut. It was a mood shared by her stepmother, Helle Christensen, who uttered a chilling prophecy as they began to eat. 8 8 8 She said: 'Enjoy your meal because this is the last time I will cook for you... because Isakin is going to kill me." A day later, on the evening of November 12, 2010, Isakin Jonsson, 32, picked up a knife and climbed on to the bed where his girlfriend was resting. He slit her throat, decapitated her, and cut pieces of flesh from her arms and legs, which he cooked in salt and homegrown cannabis leaves. The depraved crime sent shockwaves through the sleepy town of Skara, Sweden, but for Jonsson's daughter, Jamie-Lee Arrow, who was nine at the time, this came as no surprise. In the build-up to Helle's haunting prophecy, the 40-year-old - who had five children with previous partners - had been fighting with Isakin for over 24 hours while Jamie-Lee and two of her children were staying. Jamie-Lee tells The Sun: 'They were throwing plates, pushing each other, throwing knives, and me and her two other children were just sitting on the sofa, crying like babies. 'So at that time, during those 24 hours, I was certain that either I would get killed or she would.' After the vicious murder, Jonsson came forward to the police and confessed. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to forensic psychiatric care in March 2011. Looking back on Jamie-Lee's earliest memories of her dad, she reflects it was little surprise that things ended in unimaginable violence. She said: 'Walking into my dad's flat was like walking into a horror movie. Moment killer returns to room where he brutally murdered friend to steal his TV 'Pictures from Friday the 13th and Freddy Krueger. Everything was just dark and misery.' Jamie-Lee's parents separated when she was a toddler, in the early 2000s, leading her to spend her childhood split between two worlds, her mum's and her dad's. She tells us: 'I was experiencing light and dark, and even though everything was normal at my mum's, I didn't feel normal because I was carrying dark secrets about what was going on at my dad's.' Those 'dark secrets' came from Jonsson's morbid fascination with the occult, an obsession that he often tried to force on to his young daughter. She said: 'He often talked about the devil, demons and evil spirits, and when I was little he liked to introduce me to the other side. 'We would lay in the dark on the bed and he would go, 'Do you see the faces on the wall, can you see them?' 'Then he would say it so much I would actually start seeing them.' 8 8 He gave Jamie-Lee a Satanic bible at the age of 11, but his warped worldview corrupted even the most basic of parental responsibilities. When Jamie-Lee was around eight, she told her dad about her problems with bullies at school. Instead of offering some warm words and a cup of hot chocolate, he gave her a hand-made voodoo doll and a pin. 'Beautiful' second mum It was around this time that Jamie-Lee met her dad's new girlfriend, Helle, who he met at a psychiatric hospital after he was admitted following a drug overdose. On meeting Helle, Jamie-Lee said: 'I immediately fell in love with her, I thought she was so beautiful. 'She was a very unique person and wasn't afraid of my dad. I was used to girls being very careful around my dad. 'They didn't dare to do or say much, but she was joking on his behalf and she was so funny.' Jamie-Lee and Helle became very close over the years as their relationship turned into that of a mother and daughter. Jamie-Lee said: 'She even told me, you are like my daughter, I love you like a daughter. 'And I really loved her like my mum.' 8 8 But it didn't take long for Jamie-Lee to notice the cracks in Jonsson and Helle's newfound relationship. She said: 'They could have very few moments where they seemed very loving, where they were laughing and having a good time. 'And all I wanted was for them to be happy together and to always be together. 'I had a book where I had written that my biggest wish in life is that they'd stay together for the rest of my life. 'But then most of the time they were fighting and they were not good for each other." Cruellest news Those fights culminated in the violent 24-hour argument shortly before Helle's brutal murder, and her chilling final words to the girl she loved like a daughter. It was her mum who told her about what happened the night after. She sat her down on the bed and said she had something horrible to tell her. Jamie-Lee recalls: 'I was like 'No, no don't tell me, I don't want to know' and I was just trying to run out the bedroom just to not hear it. 'Then she said, 'Helle's dead' and my first reaction was, 'Was it Dad?' 8 'And then we just sat crying and screaming, it was awful. 'I felt like I had lost both his girlfriend and I had lost him and I felt something inside of me broke.' The ordeal had a traumatic effect on the nine-year-old, with Jamie-Lee going on to struggle with depression and addiction. 'I got into drinking at a very early age," she said. 'I finally had found something that soothed my anxiety and my hatred for myself, I could finally escape reality and it was amazing and I didn't want it to stop. 'It went from drinking to smoking weed to all different kinds of drugs, anything I could get my hands on I would take. 'I knew I could fall asleep and not wake up again, but I didn't care.' Horror visits Despite dreams of becoming a doctor prior to the murder, Jamie-Lee's school attendance tanked as she sank further into addiction, dropping out completely at just 15. During these dark days, Jamie-Lee still visited her father in hospital, who brainwashed her into thinking that he was the only one who cared about her. But he had not changed, as the then 17-year-old was about to find out. 'I was in a really, really bad state and I was seconds away from killing myself and I said to my dad, 'I don't know what to do, I'm going to kill myself if something doesn't change'," said Jamie-Lee. 'He said, 'The only way out is to do this', and he told me about a ritual that had came to him when he was lying in his bed, he said it was a blessing to him. 'We sat down, in front of each other, and he told me to hold his hands and he wanted me to say after him. Jamie-Lee still cannot bear to utter the words her father told her to say that day, but explains he tried to sell her soul to the devil. She said: 'I felt, like, 'What the hell am I doing?' It felt so wrong. 'I just got such a bad feeling in my body, and I was in such a bad state that I felt like I was going insane. 'Like I had lost it, I had lost touch with reality.' Walking into my dad's flat was like walking into a horror movie. Pictures from Friday the 13th and Freddy Krueger. Everything was just dark and misery On another visit, Jonsson walked his horrified daughter through the murder, in shocking detail. 'He told me with such passion, and that scared me, it was so disturbing," she said. But the final straw was when Jamie-Lee decided to confront her dad about something she wanted an apology for. When he responded violently, she decided to provoke him, to see if he was capable of doing the same thing to her as he did his former girlfriend. Who are the UK's worst serial killers? THE UK's most prolific serial killer was actually a doctor. Here's a rundown of the worst offenders in the UK. British GP Harold Shipman is one of the most prolific serial killers in recorded history. He was found guilty of murdering 15 patients in 2000, but the Shipman Inquiry examined his crimes and identified 218 victims, 80 per cent of whom were elderly women. After his death Jonathan Balls was accused of poisoning at least 22 people between 1824 and 1845. Mary Ann Cotton is suspected of murdering up to 21 people, including husbands, lovers and children. She is Britain's most prolific female serial killer. Her crimes were committed between 1852 and 1872, and she was hanged in March 1873. Amelia Sach and Annie Walters became known as the Finchley Baby Farmers after killing at least 20 babies between 1900 and 1902. The pair became the first women to be hanged at Holloway Prison on February 3, 1903. William Burke and William Hare killed 16 people and sold their bodies. Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe was found guilty in 1981 of murdering 13 women and attempting to kill seven others between 1975 and 1980. Dennis Nilsen was caged for life in 1983 after murdering up to 15 men when he picked them up from the streets. He was found guilty of six counts of murder and two counts of attempted murder and was sentenced to life in jail. Fred West was found guilty of killing 12 but it's believed he was responsible for many more deaths. She said: 'He looked at me with black eyes, like he had no love for me at all. 'He said, 'If you don't stop now, you'll see what I can do'.' That was the last time Jamie-Lee saw her dad until she confronted him as part of Investigation Discovery's recent true-crime series Evil Lives Here: The Killer Speaks. When asked why she wanted to see her dad again, she said: 'For years I had been wondering about my dad, what he's doing, what he looks like, where he is mentally. 'It just couldn't leave my mind so I knew that I did want to see him one last time just to ask the questions I was carrying and to get closure. 'I got to say goodbye to him and I got confirmation that he could never, ever in a million years be a part of my life.' Now 23, Jamie-Lee is happily engaged to her boyfriend of five years and the mother of two beautiful children, a three-year-old boy and a nine-month-old daughter, and is now able to move forward with her new life. Her Instagram has attracted over 30,000 followers in the last month, attracting an audience that is fascinated by her defiant response to her tragic upbringing. She now works as a public speaker and author, teaching people how to turn their trauma into something positive. Her advice? 'Just because your childhood sucked doesn't mean your entire life has to," she said. 'We have the power over our own lives and we can create something beautiful even if we came from something ugly.'
Yahoo
18-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Woman confronts cannibal father who murdered her 'second mom' in chilling reunion
For the first time in four years, Jamie-Lee Arrow was ready to sit face-to-face with her father, the "Skara Cannibal." It was October 2024, and the 23-year-old, now a mother to two young children, was hoping to be reunited with the man she knew and loved. "I had no idea how he would react," Arrow told Fox News Digital. "And I didn't know how I would react. I couldn't even imagine what it would feel like. But when I first saw him, it was like we had always been together. And when he started to cry and show so much emotion, it felt really nice. It felt he had changed. I thought he changed." 'Happy Face' Serial Killer Nearly Confessed Brutal Murders To Teen Daughter: 'You'll Tell The Authorities' One of Sweden's most shocking murders is being explored on Investigation Discovery's true crime series, "Evil Lives Here: The Killer Speaks." The two-hour special, now available for streaming, features intimate interviews with Arrow, as well as her father, Isakin Jonsson. In 2010, Jonsson, 46, brutally killed his girlfriend, Helle Christensen, 40, in his Skara, Sweden, home. According to the episode, he slit Christensen's throat, decapitated her and then ate parts of her remains. Arrow was nine at the time. Read On The Fox News App "I accidentally saw the newspapers," she recalled. "I didn't know what the word 'cannibal' meant. But, when I was 13, I read some articles, and then I understood what the word meant. But by then, my dad had me wrapped around his finger. He made himself the good person, and his girlfriend was the villain. He brainwashed me to believe that." As a child, Arrow lived in two worlds. She described her mother's home as "loving and normal." But when it came time to visit her dad, she experienced "the dark side." There was no light in his home, she recalled. He kept himself busy watching violent horror films and making macabre voodoo dolls. She was warned by Jonsson not to tell her mother. "It was like demons and the devil were our reality," she said. "… That was so normal to me. But I also kept all of that inside of me." On some days, Jonsson was "the perfect dad" who was doting and loving. But his mood swings were like whiplash, and, without warning, he could be cold and distant. He would sometimes send a confused Arrow back home when "he couldn't deal with me." Follow The Fox True Crime Team On X At nine years old, Arrow met Christensen, her father's new girlfriend. Arrow was smitten by the mother of five's warm demeanor and flaming red hair. She considered her a "second mom." "My impression was that she really loved him," Arrow explained. "But I was never under the impression that my dad loved her. I knew she . . . was begging for him to love her back. But at the same time . . . she could provoke him. They could have a really good time. They could laugh together, watch films together. But it was like a rollercoaster all the time." The episode described how Christensen and Jonsson frequently fought violently. Arrow witnessed their brawls and would worry that something bad might happen. "[My father] lost touch with reality," said Arrow. "I felt like I was losing my dad more and more. The happy times became rarer." Arrow still vividly remembers the last time she saw Christensen. She called it "the worst weekend of my life." "She cooked some food for us," said Arrow. "As she served it, she went, like, 'Enjoy your meal because this is the last thing you'll ever eat from me, because your dad is going to kill me.' That's one of the last things I ever heard her say." Sign Up To Get The True Crime Newsletter Soon after, Christensen was gone. Arrow's mother tried to shield her daughter from the news of the murder. Arrow said she went into a state of shock when she found out from the press that her beloved "stepmom" had been killed by her father. "I cried my eyes out," she said. "… I went into denial very quickly. The next day, I was cold. I was cold as ice. I couldn't feel anything…. I was just numb. And it was scary, because I didn't recognize myself. I think I went into denial to protect myself." In 2011, Jonsson was convicted of Christensen's murder. The court placed him in a psychiatric hospital. Over the years, Arrow spiraled into depression and anxiety, leading to a crippling drug addiction. During that time, she stayed in touch with her father. When she opened up to him about being teased at school, he suggested using voodoo dolls to punish her bullies, the episode revealed. Arrow later confided in her father that she was suffering from depression and was contemplating taking her own life. He made her perform a ritual where she would have to sell her soul to the devil, she said. He also opened up about the murder. "When I was 18, he asked me, 'Jamie, do you want me to walk you through how I committed the murder?'" said Arrow. "It's such a twisted thing to say. [But] he walked me through it. I was so surprised, because he showed no remorse. He almost said it with passion. And I was sitting there wanting to throw up. He almost had a smirk on his face. Then it all became so real, like, 'Oh, my God. He really did this.' That's the first time I truly felt in my body that my dad was not well. This man is sick." "… His eyes had turned black," said Arrow. "He reminded me of what it used to be like when I was a child. That scared me, because he talked to me in the same way as he used to talk to his girlfriend that he murdered. That made me feel like I was no different from her." GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE True Crime Hub At 19, Arrow decided to stop visiting her father. As time passed, she wondered whether he had changed for the better. That's when she decided to see him again. The series captured the pair's unsettling reunion. During their emotional sit-down, Jonsson claimed that he had killed Christensen because he would then get psychiatric help for his deteriorating mental health. He also claimed that Christensen had had a death wish. "I used to believe that so hard," Arrow admitted. "I didn't question it at all. I do believe there are some truths in that, but I do also believe that he always liked watching . . . really twisted films. I do believe he had some sick fantasies. I believe he saw the murder as his chance to live out those fantasies." Still, Arrow doesn't think of Jonsson as "evil." "I think of him as a very broken, sick person," she said. "The thing he did was evil. That was an evil thing to do. And there is nothing that makes up for that. There is no excuse for that. It was completely and utterly evil. But I see him as my dad, my very broken and sick dad." "I know he had a very difficult childhood, a lot worse than mine," she continued. "I feel sorry for the little child that is my dad, because no one knows what would've happened if he had gotten a better start in life." According to the series, Jonsson has been released from the hospital, but remains under its supervision. Arrow, having closure, now mourns him "like he is dead," People magazine reported. The episode shared that she has no desire to have Jonsson be a part of her children's lives. "Becoming a mother made me look at everything differently," she reflected. "I can look at the little Jamie from a parent's perspective. That made me realize so much about my childhood. I used to think that some events happened in my childhood because of me, because it was my fault. But becoming a mother made me realize that none of it was my fault." "Sometimes I just want to go back in time and hug myself," she said. "… My goal with sharing my story has always been to make people realize and believe that anyone can make it, no matter where they come from, no matter how broken they are. If you suffer from PTSD, if you suffer from trauma or addiction – I believe that everyone on this Earth can get out of any darkness."Original article source: Woman confronts cannibal father who murdered her 'second mom' in chilling reunion


Fox News
18-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Fox News
Woman confronts cannibal father who murdered her 'second mom' in chilling reunion
For the first time in four years, Jamie-Lee Arrow was ready to sit face-to-face with her father, the "Skara Cannibal." It was October 2024, and the 23-year-old, now a mother to two young children, was hoping to be reunited with the man she knew and loved. "I had no idea how he would react," Arrow told Fox News Digital. "And I didn't know how I would react. I couldn't even imagine what it would feel like. But when I first saw him, it was like we had always been together. And when he started to cry and show so much emotion, it felt really nice. It felt he had changed. I thought he changed." One of Sweden's most shocking murders is being explored on Investigation Discovery's true crime series, "Evil Lives Here: The Killer Speaks." The two-hour special, now available for streaming, features intimate interviews with Arrow, as well as her father, Isakin Jonsson. In 2010, Jonsson, 46, brutally killed his girlfriend, Helle Christensen, 40, in his Skara, Sweden, home. According to the episode, he slit Christensen's throat, decapitated her and then ate parts of her remains. Arrow was nine at the time. "I accidentally saw the newspapers," she recalled. "I didn't know what the word 'cannibal' meant. But, when I was 13, I read some articles, and then I understood what the word meant. But by then, my dad had me wrapped around his finger. He made himself the good person, and his girlfriend was the villain. He brainwashed me to believe that." As a child, Arrow lived in two worlds. She described her mother's home as "loving and normal." But when it came time to visit her dad, she experienced "the dark side." There was no light in his home, she recalled. He kept himself busy watching violent horror films and making macabre voodoo dolls. She was warned by Jonsson not to tell her mother. "It was like demons and the devil were our reality," she said. "… That was so normal to me. But I also kept all of that inside of me." On some days, Jonsson was "the perfect dad" who was doting and loving. But his mood swings were like whiplash, and, without warning, he could be cold and distant. He would sometimes send a confused Arrow back home when "he couldn't deal with me." At nine years old, Arrow met Christensen, her father's new girlfriend. Arrow was smitten by the mother of five's warm demeanor and flaming red hair. She considered her a "second mom." "My impression was that she really loved him," Arrow explained. "But I was never under the impression that my dad loved her. I knew she . . . was begging for him to love her back. But at the same time . . . she could provoke him. They could have a really good time. They could laugh together, watch films together. But it was like a rollercoaster all the time." The episode described how Christensen and Jonsson frequently fought violently. Arrow witnessed their brawls and would worry that something bad might happen. "[My father] lost touch with reality," said Arrow. "I felt like I was losing my dad more and more. The happy times became rarer." Arrow still vividly remembers the last time she saw Christensen. She called it "the worst weekend of my life." "She cooked some food for us," said Arrow. "As she served it, she went, like, 'Enjoy your meal because this is the last thing you'll ever eat from me, because your dad is going to kill me.' That's one of the last things I ever heard her say." Soon after, Christensen was gone. Arrow's mother tried to shield her daughter from the news of the murder. Arrow said she went into a state of shock when she found out from the press that her beloved "stepmom" had been killed by her father. "I cried my eyes out," she said. "… I went into denial very quickly. The next day, I was cold. I was cold as ice. I couldn't feel anything…. I was just numb. And it was scary, because I didn't recognize myself. I think I went into denial to protect myself." In 2011, Jonsson was convicted of Christensen's murder. The court placed him in a psychiatric hospital. Over the years, Arrow spiraled into depression and anxiety, leading to a crippling drug addiction. During that time, she stayed in touch with her father. When she opened up to him about being teased at school, he suggested using voodoo dolls to punish her bullies, the episode revealed. Arrow later confided in her father that she was suffering from depression and was contemplating taking her own life. He made her perform a ritual where she would have to sell her soul to the devil, she said. He also opened up about the murder. "When I was 18, he asked me, 'Jamie, do you want me to walk you through how I committed the murder?'" said Arrow. "It's such a twisted thing to say. [But] he walked me through it. I was so surprised, because he showed no remorse. He almost said it with passion. And I was sitting there wanting to throw up. He almost had a smirk on his face. Then it all became so real, like, 'Oh, my God. He really did this.' That's the first time I truly felt in my body that my dad was not well. This man is sick." "… His eyes had turned black," said Arrow. "He reminded me of what it used to be like when I was a child. That scared me, because he talked to me in the same way as he used to talk to his girlfriend that he murdered. That made me feel like I was no different from her." GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB At 19, Arrow decided to stop visiting her father. As time passed, she wondered whether he had changed for the better. That's when she decided to see him again. The series captured the pair's unsettling reunion. During their emotional sit-down, Jonsson claimed that he had killed Christensen because he would then get psychiatric help for his deteriorating mental health. He also claimed that Christensen had had a death wish. "I used to believe that so hard," Arrow admitted. "I didn't question it at all. I do believe there are some truths in that, but I do also believe that he always liked watching . . . really twisted films. I do believe he had some sick fantasies. I believe he saw the murder as his chance to live out those fantasies." Still, Arrow doesn't think of Jonsson as "evil." "I think of him as a very broken, sick person," she said. "The thing he did was evil. That was an evil thing to do. And there is nothing that makes up for that. There is no excuse for that. It was completely and utterly evil. But I see him as my dad, my very broken and sick dad." "I know he had a very difficult childhood, a lot worse than mine," she continued. "I feel sorry for the little child that is my dad, because no one knows what would've happened if he had gotten a better start in life." According to the series, Jonsson has been released from the hospital, but remains under its supervision. Arrow, having closure, now mourns him "like he is dead," People magazine reported. The episode shared that she has no desire to have Jonsson be a part of her children's lives. "Becoming a mother made me look at everything differently," she reflected. "I can look at the little Jamie from a parent's perspective. That made me realize so much about my childhood. I used to think that some events happened in my childhood because of me, because it was my fault. But becoming a mother made me realize that none of it was my fault." "Sometimes I just want to go back in time and hug myself," she said. "… My goal with sharing my story has always been to make people realize and believe that anyone can make it, no matter where they come from, no matter how broken they are. If you suffer from PTSD, if you suffer from trauma or addiction – I believe that everyone on this Earth can get out of any darkness." "My Father, the Cannibal" is now streaming on Max. New episodes of "Evil Lives Here: The Killer Speaks" air Sunday at 9 p.m. on ID.