Woman faces 'skara cannibal' father, she commits a brutal murder in Sweden

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Jamie-Lee Arrow is preparing to face-to-face with his father, Skara Cannibal, for the first time in four years.

It was October 2024, the 23-year-old, now a mother of two, hopes to be reunited with the man she knows and loves.

“I don’t know how he will react,” Arrow told Fox News Numbers. "And I don't know how I would react. I can't even imagine how it would feel. But when I first met him it was like we were always together.

"Happy Face" serial killer admits almost a brutal murder to a dozen daughters: "You'll tell the authorities"

Jamie-Lee Arrow opens up her turbulent childhood in the real crime series "The Evil Life: The Killer Talking." (Investigation found)

One of Sweden’s most shocking murders is the discussion of “The Evil Life: The Killer Talks” in the True Crime Series found in the investigation. Now a two-hour special that can be streamed, with in-depth interviews with Arrow and her father, Isakin Jonsson.

In 2010, Jonsson, 46, brutally killed his girlfriend, Helle Christensen, 40, in his home in Skara, Sweden. According to the episode, he cut Christensen's throat, beheaded her, and then ate a portion of the body. There were nine arrows at that time.

Jamie-Lee Arrow (common with father Isakin Jonsson) said she struggled after the 2010 murder. (Investigation found)

"I accidentally saw the newspaper," she recalled. "I didn't know what the word 'Cannibal' means. But when I was 13, I read some articles and then I understood the meaning of the word. But by then, my father had me tangled his fingers. He made himself a good man, and his girlfriend was a villain. He brainwashed me and believed me."

Isakin Jonsson, known as "Skara Cannibal", is reunited with his daughter, Jamie-Lee Arrow. (Investigation found)

As a kid, Arrow lived in two worlds. She described her mother's home as "love and normality." But when she visited her father, she experienced the "dark side". She recalled that there was no light in his house. He has been busy watching violent horror movies and making creepy Vodoo dolls. Jonson warned her not to tell her mother.

"Like the demon, the demon is our reality," she said. "...It's so normal for me. But I keep all of this in me, too."

Jamie-Lee Arrow said growing up, her father was fascinated by “twisted horror movies,” Voodoo Dolls and “The Devil.” He will also have unpredictable emotional fluctuations. (Investigation found)

On some days, Jonson is the "perfect dad" of doting and loving. But his mood fluctuates like a whip, and without warning, he may be cold and far away. He sometimes sends a confused arrow when “he can’t deal with me.”

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Jamie-Lee Arrow's nine-year-old father began dating Helle Christensen with a woman she called "second mom." (Investigation found)

Arrow, nine years old, meets his father's new girlfriend Christensen. Arrow was fascinated by five mothers with warm manners and burning red hair. She thinks she is the "second mother".

“My impression is that she really loves him,” Aro explained. "But I never had the impression that my dad loved her. I know she...begged him to love her back. But at the same time...she could provoke him. They could have fun. They could have fun. They could have laughed together, and watched movies together. But it was always like a roller coaster."

Jamie-Lee Arrow (see below) describes Helle Christensen as “beautiful.” They immediately shared a loving relationship. (Investigation found)

This episode describes how Christensen and Jonson often fight fiercely. Arrows witnessed their fight and would be worried that something bad might happen.

Helle Christensen was murdered by her boyfriend Isakin Jonsson in 2010. She is 40 years old. (Investigation found)

“(my father) lost contact with reality,” Arrow said. "I feel like I'm losing my father more and more. Happy times are getting scarce."

The arrow still vividly remembers the last time she saw Christensen. She called it "the worst weekend of my life."

Jamie-Lee Arrow said her last conversation with Helle Christensen still bothers her. (Investigation found)

"She cooked some food for us," said Elro. "When she arrived, she went, like, 'Enjoy your meal because it was the last thing you ate from me because your father was going to kill me." That was the last thing I've heard her say. ”

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Jamie-Lee Arrow's reunion with Isakin Jonsson is captured by the camera. After the murder, Jonsson changed his name to "dlabbad". According to People magazine, Arrow said it was "infected". (Investigation found)

Not long after, Christensen left.

Airo's mother tries to save her daughter from the murder. Arrow said she was shocked when she discovered from the media that her beloved "stepmother" was killed by her father.

"I cried." "...I was quickly denied. The next day, I was cold. I was as cold as ice. I couldn't feel anything.... I just numb. It was horrible because I didn't know myself. I think I denied protecting myself."

Isakin Jonsson has been released from a psychiatric hospital, but he is still under supervision. (Investigation found)

In 2011, Jonson was convicted of Christensen's murder. The court placed him in a mental hospital. Over the years, Arrow fell into depression and anxiety, leading to a severe drug addiction.

During that time, she kept in touch with her father. The episode revealed that when she opened up to him about being teased at school, he suggested using Voodoo dolls to punish her bullies.

Ellow later admitted to her father that she was suffering from depression and was considering suicide. She said he made her perform a ritual in which she had to sell her soul to the devil.

He also made public the murder case.

Jamie-Lee Arrow said she wanted to understand why her father committed such an outrageous crime. (Investigation found)

Ellow said: "When I was 18, he asked me, 'Jamie, do you want me to take you through my murder?'

"It was a twisted word. (But) he took me through it. I was surprised because he didn't regret it. He said it almost passionately. I sat there and wanted to throw it away. He almost giggled. This was the first time I felt bad in my body that my father was."

Jamie-Lee Arrow sees her father talking to her father during the party. (Investigation found)

“…His eyes turned black,” Aro said. "He reminded me of what I was like when I was a kid. It scared me because of the way he and I talked to me with my girlfriend. It made me feel like I was no different from her."

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After the murder, young Jamie-Lee Arrow visits her father, Isakin Jonsson. At the time, Aro said, she was eager to connect with him. (Investigation found)

At the age of 19, Aro decided to stop visiting her father. As time passed, she wondered if he had changed. That was when she decided to see him again.

The series captures the disturbing party of the two. Jonsson claimed while sitting emotionally that he killed Christensen because he would get psychiatric help for his mental health. He also claimed Christensen had a desire to die.

During the party, Isakin Jonsson insists on his daughter Jamie-Lee Arrow (pictured here), who committed the murder so that he could get help from psychiatric departments. He also claimed that his girlfriend had a desire to die. (Investigation found)

“I used to be hard to believe,” Aro admitted. "I have no doubts at all. I do believe there are some facts in it, but I also believe he always likes to watch...

Jamie-Lee Arrow describes her father as a psychopath. (Investigation found)

Still, Arrow doesn't consider Jonson "evil."

"I think he is a very broken patient," she said. "What he did was evil. It was an evil thing. There was nothing to make up for. There was no excuse. It was totally, totally evil. But I see him as my father, my very broken and sick father."

Young Isakin Jonsson. (Investigation found)

"I know his childhood was very difficult, much worse than mine," she continued. "I feel sorry for my father's kid because no one knows what would happen to a better start to his life."

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Jamie-Lee Arrow said she didn't want her father, Isakin Jonsson (pictured) to be in the lives of her children. (Investigation found)

According to reports from the series, Jonson has been released from the hospital, but is still under his supervision. According to People, Arrow is closed down and now mourns him "like he's dead." The episode shared that she doesn't want Jonson to be a part of her child's life.

"Being a mother made me look different," she reflected. "From a parent's perspective, I could look at Little Jamie. It made me realize a lot about my childhood. I used to think that some events were because of my fault in my childhood because it was my fault. But being a mother made me realize that it wasn't my fault."

Jamie-Lee Arrow hopes her story will encourage others to speak out and share their stories with PTSD, depression and anxiety. “You’re not alone,” she told Fox News Numbers. (Investigation found)

“Sometimes I just want to go back and embrace myself,” she said. “…The goal of sharing my story has always been to make people realize and believe that anyone can do it, no matter where they are, no matter how broken they are. If you have PTSD, if you have trauma or addiction, then I believe that everyone on the planet can get rid of any darkness.”

"My Father, Cannibal" is now streaming on Max. Sunday at 9 p.m. on ID, a new episode of "The Evil Life: The Killer Talking".