Three arrested for violent home robbery and assault in Mijas, Málaga

The victim, a Swedish resident, suffered multiple injuries from beatings, knife wounds, and chemical burns requiring hospitalization.
They beat him, cut him, poured bleach on his body to make him talk.
Three young attackers used escalating violence to coerce a Swedish resident into revealing where he kept valuables.

In the coastal town of Mijas, three young people turned proximity into predation — using school ties to map a man's daily life before entering his home disguised as delivery workers and subjecting him to sustained, calculated violence. The Spanish Civil Guard, after months of forensic and investigative work, identified and arrested all three, who were minors at the time of the crime and have since been referred to the Juvenile Prosecutor's Office. The case asks a quiet but unsettling question about how trust and routine — the ordinary fabric of a life — can be studied and weaponized by those who move within it.

  • A Swedish resident in Mijas was beaten, cut with a blade, and burned with bleach in his own home by attackers who had spent weeks learning when he would be alone.
  • The assault was not opportunistic — two of the perpetrators attended school with the victim's daughter and used that access to map his morning routines with precision.
  • On the day of the attack, they arrived at his door disguised as couriers from a recognizable delivery company, turning the ordinary expectation of a parcel into a point of entry.
  • The victim was bound, repeatedly struck, and chemically burned until he complied — his injuries were severe enough to require hospitalization.
  • A months-long Civil Guard investigation, built on forensic evidence and operational leads, eventually identified all three suspects, who now face proceedings through the Juvenile Prosecutor's Office in Málaga.

Last May, three young people carried out a meticulously planned assault on a man's home in Mijas, a town in Málaga province. They had not chosen him at random. Two of the attackers went to school with his daughter, which gave them an intimate window into his daily life — they knew he dropped her off each morning and returned home alone. They watched, they waited, and they chose their moment.

On the day of the robbery, two of them arrived at his door posing as employees of a well-known courier company. A third remained outside, acting as lookout and getaway support. Once inside, they moved without hesitation — binding the man's hands and feet, beating him, cutting him with a blade, and pouring bleach over his body. The violence was sustained and purposeful, designed to force compliance. They left with around €1,300 worth of cash, jewelry, clothing, and electronics. The victim required hospital treatment for his injuries.

The Civil Guard spent months reconstructing the crime — examining the scene, following investigative threads, and gradually building a picture of who was responsible. All three suspects were eventually identified and arrested. Because they were minors when the attack took place, they were handed to the Juvenile Prosecutor's Office in Málaga rather than processed through the adult criminal system.

What the case leaves behind is not easily measured in euros. The attackers had used the ordinary closeness of school life — a daughter, a carpool, a predictable morning — as the architecture of a trap. The sum they stole was modest. The harm they inflicted was not.

In May of last year, three young people forced their way into a home in Mijas, a town in Málaga province, and attacked the man living there with methodical violence. They beat him repeatedly, cut him with a blade, and poured bleach across his body—all to force him to reveal where he kept his money and jewelry. By the time they left, they had taken roughly 1,300 euros in cash, jewelry, clothing, and electronic devices. The victim, a Swedish resident, was hurt badly enough to need hospital care.

What made this crime distinctive was not just its brutality but its planning. The three attackers had watched their target beforehand. Two of them went to school with his daughter, which gave them access to information about his daily movements. They knew he drove his child to school each morning and returned home alone for a stretch of time. They used that knowledge to time their assault.

On the day of the robbery, two of the attackers posed as delivery workers from a well-known courier company to get inside the house. A third waited nearby, watching and ready to help them escape. Once inside, they found the man alone and moved quickly. They restrained him by binding his hands and feet, then subjected him to sustained violence—the beating, the knife wounds, the chemical burns—each act designed to break his resistance and make him cooperate.

The Civil Guard's investigation took months. Officers conducted a detailed examination of the crime scene and pursued operational leads over time, gradually narrowing down who was responsible. Eventually they identified all three suspects and brought them in. Because they were minors when the crime occurred, they were handed over to the Juvenile Prosecutor's Office in Málaga rather than the adult criminal system.

The case illustrates a particular kind of predatory thinking: the attackers had studied their victim, learned his patterns through proximity and school connections, and struck when conditions favored them. They were not random intruders but young people who had calculated the risk and chosen their moment. The violence they inflicted—the deliberate use of bleach, the binding, the repeated blows—suggests they understood what it would take to overcome resistance and secure compliance. What they took was modest in monetary terms. What they inflicted was not.

The attackers employed a high level of violence against the victim and knew his habits through prior surveillance, taking advantage of the fact that two of them shared an educational center with the victim's daughter.
— Civil Guard statement
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why would three young people go to the trouble of watching someone before robbing them? That seems like more work than just breaking in randomly.

Model

Because they wanted to control the variables. They needed to know when he'd be alone, when he'd be vulnerable. Two of them had a connection to his daughter through school—that wasn't coincidence, it was access. They were building a map of his life.

Inventor

And the disguise as delivery workers—that's almost professional.

Model

It is. It gets you through the door without raising alarm. The person opens up because they're expecting a package. By the time he realizes what's happening, they're already inside and he's outnumbered.

Inventor

The bleach is what strikes me as particularly cruel. Not just robbery, but the deliberate infliction of pain.

Model

It's coercion through terror. They needed him to talk, to tell them where things were hidden. The beating alone might not have been enough. The bleach—that's psychological. It's saying: we will hurt you in ways you can't predict or control.

Inventor

And they were minors when this happened?

Model

Yes. Which raises questions about how young people end up thinking this way, planning this way. This wasn't impulsive. This was calculated.

Inventor

What happens to them now?

Model

They're in the juvenile system. The outcome depends on how the courts view their culpability and what rehabilitation might look like. But the victim is the one who has to live with what happened to him.

Contact Us FAQ