Teenage hitman recruited by Swedish gang linked to Iran plotted assassination in UK

04 June 2026 , 15:12
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Teenage hitman recruited by Swedish gang linked to Iran plotted assassination in UK
Teenage hitman recruited by Swedish gang linked to Iran plotted assassination in UK

A Norwegian teenager was employed by a Swedish organized crime group used by the Iranian regime to kill someone in England, a court has learned.

Johannes Kongsnes Natland, 19, traveled to the UK on March 17 last year with the intention to “carry out a hit” in exchange for money, it is claimed.

The teenager was acting for an organization called Foxtrot Network, but was stopped from executing an attack after being arrested in a hotel room in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, two days following his arrival, The Old Bailey in London heard.

Police discovered a semi-automatic pistol, a revolver, and 12 rounds of live ammunition in his possession, it was heard.

Prosecutor Alastair Richardson informed the trial opening that Natland, from Stavanger in south-west Norway, had agreed to work for the group “in exchange for some money”.

The court was informed that an individual referred to as Agent 47 had contacted a figure with the username Generalen to request someone to carry out an assassination in the UK. In the message, Agent 47 told Generalen that there was €25,000 (£21,590) “in the pot”.

Jurors heard that Natland was contacted on March 15 by a user called UnknownHustler, notifying him of the job. Natland later messaged his girlfriend saying: “I’m going on a crazy mission.” Jurors were shown further messages in which Generalen, in a group chat with Natland, told Agent 47: “This is the assassin for EU, brother.”

Johannes Kongsnes Natland is accused of flying in to Manchester Airport to carry out an assassination in the UK. EPA qhxidiqxkiqxqinv

The defendant flew from Norway to Manchester Airport on March 17, arriving that evening. Upon arrival, Natland was interviewed by Border Force officers due to concerns about his age and lack of money. He told them he had come to the city to meet his gamer friends and see landmarks, the court was told.

The defendant left the airport and took a taxi to a hotel in Manchester. That night, Agent 47 sent him a message reading: “Sleep and when you wake up we start.”

The following day, Natland was directed to collect the guns and ammunition from a wooded area and messaged his girlfriend saying: “In the bag is bang.” He also purchased rubber gloves and arranged a car, the prosecutor told jurors.

On the morning of March 19, firearms officers went to the Briar Court Hotel in Huddersfield to arrest Natland. As the defendant came to the doorway, he raised his hands “imitating holding a firearm, and pretended to shoot one of the officers,” the court heard.

The prosecutor said: “You may think that of itself gives you a little insight into what he was in the United Kingdom to do.”

Mr. Richardson informed jurors: “The group that had recruited him, the Foxtrot Network, is a Swedish organized crime group used by the Iranian regime.

“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.”

Mr. Richardson told jurors that while it was a Swedish-based group, its leaders lived elsewhere. He added: “The Foxtrot Network often uses perpetrators who are very young, and with whom they have no direct link.”

The court heard that Johannes Natland was directed to a tree in a wooded area to collect guns and ammunition. PA

“The use of social media has enabled the rapid increase of cross-border crime. The groups used by the Foxtrot Network, also known as the Swedish Foxes, can have anything from a few to several thousand members, with group names such as Samurai Children.”

Mr. Richardson said that the group operated with several levels of organization, including instigators, which “fits neatly” with Agent 47, and lower-end recruiters such as Generalen. He added that facilitators were reportedly responsible for the logistics of the crime, and enforcers were the young men at the “bottom of the chain.”

The prosecutor added: “Recruitment of enforcers is focused on young individuals, often those linked to institutions such as care homes. In general, they have no connection with the intended victim.”

Mr. Richardson said he was informing the jurors to provide them an understanding of the serious nature of the enterprise the defendant had allegedly entered into.

He said this would help them understand “how an 18-year-old from a foreign country was able to enter into an agreement to murder someone he did not know and did not care about, in the United Kingdom.”

Natland denies a charge of conspiracy to murder. He has previously pleaded guilty to possession of the two firearms and ammunition. The trial continues.

Editorial Team

Emma Davis

Deputy Editor

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