Daniel Wretström (15 October 1983 – 9 December 2000) was a Swedish neo-nazi and white power skinhead murdered in Salem, Sweden.
He played drums in the white power rock band "Vit Legion" ("White Legion").Wretström lived with his mother, Birgitta, and sister, Sara.
According to Birgitta, Wretström had been diagnosed as suffering from ADHD.
She described him as a "searcher", who attended a Pentecostal church.Following a conflict at an apartment party in Salem where Wretström, according to witnesses in the investigation, slapped a girl and while drunk and upset at a nearby bus station close to a local youth center a fight broke out between Wretström and a group of young people.
It is alleged that, after talk in the area about a racist assaulting a girl at a party and wearing a shirt or sweater with a racist print on, a group of youths followed him to the bus station.
A fight ensued in which he was assaulted by the group which the media described as being "from immigrant backgrounds".
After he was beaten and rolled into a ditch one assailant called his older and mentally unstable male relative who arrived at the scene armed with a knife and stabbed him multiple times in the neck and throat.Wretström's murder inspired Swedish neo-Nazis, ultra-nationalists and other far-right activists to organize an annual demonstration known as the Salem March Those activists consider Wretström to be a martyr to their cause.
The neo-Nazi group Blood and Honour has called him "the Horst Wessel of our generation", vowing to exact revenge.
Their demonstrations drew a response from the Swedish anti-Fascist group Antifascistisk Aktion.The murder became the topic in many heated debates and articles in Swedish media, political papers and in Swedish society at that time, and the motives and cause of the murder is still debated even today.
The far-right immediately accused multicultural society and left-wing politics and has often protested at media calling Wretström a nazi; looking away from the facts that he had tattoos of the SS totenkopf & white power-slogans and was active in the Swedish white power skinhead scene, while many anti-racist journalists and papers often mentioned the brawl at the party as the motive.
The official police investigation leaves it somehow unclear what really caused the fight and murder since there was many accused and many witnesses who gave different versions of the events.
Stieg Larsson, then the editor of Expo, an anti-Fascist magazine, denied that the Expo organisation had ever defended the murder of Wretström, pointing out that the Turkish-born journalist Kurdo Baksi had been one of the first to condemn the perpetrators.The perpetrators were arrestes and prosecuted and because of their young age, most were sentenced to youth care facilities.
The accused murderer who stabbed Wretström was ruled insane at the time of the murder by the court and sentenced to psychiatric care.