What is Stockholm syndrome? It all started with a bank robbery 50 years ago

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  • Term originated when thieves in Sweden took hostages during a 1973 bank heist; during a six-day stand-off with police, victims allegedly took captors’ side
  • Phrase is used in English and pop culture to describe people who forge unexpected bonds with others who treat them badly
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Press photographers and police snipers lie side by side on a roof opposite the Kreditbanken Bank on Norrmalmstorg Square in Stockholm, Sweden on August 24, 1973. A misfired robbery turned into a six-day standoff that gave birth to the phrase “Stockholm syndrome”, meaning that a hostage considers the police a greater threat and sides with the hostage-taker. Photo: AFP

It’s a common term these days, used to describe the bond that victims of kidnappings or hostage situations sometimes develop with their captors: “Stockholm syndrome.” And it got its name 50 years ago last week, during a failed bank robbery in Sweden’s capital.

Stockholm syndrome – dubbed by its founder “Norrmalmstorg syndrome,” after the square where the bank heist took place – has since been used in connection with hostage-takings around the world, including the kidnapping of newspaper heiress Patty Hearst in the 1970s.

Here’s a look at Stockholm syndrome and how it got its name.

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What is Stockholm syndrome?

It refers to the bond that can develop between hostages and their captors in hostage-taking and kidnapping situations. In some cases, hostages may develop sympathies for their captors and their cause – and even turn against the police. Rather than a diagnosis of a disorder, experts describe it as a psychological coping mechanism used by some hostages to endure being held captive and abused.

How did it get its name?

The term can be traced back to Swedish criminologist and psychiatrist Nils Bejerot, who advised police in a stand-off during a bank robbery in the Swedish capital in August 1973. During the stand-off, some of the hostages appeared to side with the hostage-takers and against the police, a phenomenon Bejerot called “Norrmalmstorg syndrome.” Internationally, it became known as Stockholm syndrome.

Bejerot’s daughter Susanne says her father, who died in 1988, never thought the term would gain such traction worldwide. “He didn’t understand that it would become such a big thing,” she said.

Three of the four hostages and bank robber Clark Olofsson (right) shortly before the gunmen were overwhelmed by police. Photo: AP

What happened during that bank robbery?

On August 23, 1973, convicted thief Jan-Erik Olsson, 32, tried to rob a bank in downtown Stockholm while on furlough from prison – meaning he was allowed to leave for a short time. Police responded quickly, and a stand-off ensued.

Olsson, armed with a submachine gun, took four bank employees hostage and demanded money, a bulletproof vest and a getaway car. He also demanded that his former jail mate, Clark Olofsson, be released from prison and brought to the bank. Authorities agreed.

The drama played out on live television in Sweden as police tried to persuade Olsson and Olofsson to surrender. Even Prime Minister Olof Palme got involved in the negotiations.

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At one point, a hostage, Kristin Enmark, told Palme over the telephone that she was afraid of the police, not of the two criminals. She appealed to authorities to meet their demands. Enmark later said she had developed a bond with Olofsson, whom she saw as the guarantor of her safety.

Two police officers were injured with gunshot wounds during the stand-off, which ended on August 28 when police, using tear gas, stormed the bank, arrested Olsson and Olofsson and freed the hostages.

This file photo taken on August 28, 1973 shows five police officers with gas masks carrying away Jan-Erik Olsson, wearing handcuffs, after the six-day stand-off. Photo: AFP

What are other examples of Stockholm syndrome?

One of the most well-known cases happened the following year, 1974, when Patty Hearst, the 19-year-old granddaughter of a wealthy American newspaper tycoon, was kidnapped in the United States by the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA), an armed revolutionary group.

Two months later, questions concerning Hearst’s ties to her captors – and the notion of Stockholm syndrome – arose after Hearst declared her allegiance to the SLA, denounced her family and posed for a photograph carrying a weapon in front of the SLA flag. She was arrested in 1975 and was sentenced to seven years in prison. President Jimmy Carter commuted her sentence in 1979, giving her a less severe punishment. She was later pardoned by President Bill Clinton.

Stockholm syndrome has also been applied in the context of victims of domestic violence or childhood sexual abuse who develop connections with their abusers.

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Is it real, or just a myth?

Stockholm syndrome isn’t listed as a diagnosis by the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders or the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems. Some experts question whether it’s a psychological condition at all or just a survival strategy – rational choices made by some people as they face extreme danger.

In the US some law enforcement experts have said the phenomenon is rare and overpublicised by the media. But it still features frequently in popular culture, including books, films and music, and has entered the English lexicon as an informal term for people who forge unexpected bonds with others who treat them badly.

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