Norwegian teen, hired by Swedish crime group used by Iran, planned UK murder, London court told


LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) - A ⁠Norwegian teenager travelled to Britain to carry out a murder in ⁠return for money, having been recruited by a Swedish organised ‌crime group used by the Iranian government, British prosecutors told a London court on Wednesday.

Johannes Natland, now 19, was arrested in a hotel room in Huddersfield in northern England ​in March last year in possession of two ⁠firearms and ammunition, prosecutor Alistair ⁠Richardson told London's Old Bailey Court.

"He had been recruited by an organisation ⁠called ‌the Foxtrot Network to an agreement that in return for money he would travel here and undertake a hit," Richardson said.

"The ⁠group that had recruited him, the Foxtrot Network, is ​a Swedish organised ‌crime group used by the Iranian regime."

Natland denies a charge of ⁠conspiracy to murder ​an unknown person.

Richardson told the jury that Natland had already pleaded guilty to possessing a semi-automatic pistol, a revolver and live ammunition in October.

"We do not ⁠know who the defendant was planning to ​murder, but as you will see from his messages, the messages of others, and what he told his friends in Norway before he set out ⁠on his plan, it was clear that was his plan," he said.

The messages, the prosecutor told the court, showed a figure with the user name 'Agent 47' was in charge. In discussions with another individual about "getting an assassin", ​Agent 47 said there was 25,000 euros ⁠in the pot, Richardson said.

He told the court that the first person they ​had intended to commit the murder was ‌having second thoughts and so they turned ​to Natland.

"This was a murder that needed to be completed," Richardson said.

The trial continues.

(Reporting by Michael Holden; editing by Sarah Young)

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