Strasbourg · Stockholm · Nice
Lexalilaw is an independent legal practice based in Nice, dedicated to advancing the rights of Swedish children and adults whose cases warrant the scrutiny of the European Court of Human Rights.
47
Council of Europe states
ECHR
Convention rights enforced
SE → EU
Swedish cases, European bench
AI+
AI-assisted case preparation
Why we exist
Lexalilaw began the day our founder's children were taken from him by the Swedish authorities — unlawfully, and on a fabricated record later relayed to the Dutch authorities to bring the children back on false grounds. What followed was years of fighting a system designed to outlast the families it dismantles.
Our founder — a Social Democrat politician from Täby — was extradited from the Netherlands to a Swedish prison on evidence falsified by public officials: prosecutors, judges and lawyers who acted in concert, and who appeared as plaintiffs against him because of his political convictions. The same apparatus that engineered his imprisonment had already taken his children and placed them in foster care unlawfully.
That is the abuse of public office Lexalilaw was built to confront — and the reason every file we accept is measured against the Convention, not the convenience of the state.
Today, Lexalilaw is an AI-assisted legal agency based in Nice. We combine the discipline of Swedish jurisprudence with modern AI tooling — for case-file analysis, evidence indexing, and Convention cross-referencing — to bring Swedish human rights and children's rights cases before the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.
“No parent should have to learn the law to get their child back. We learnt it so the next family doesn't have to.”

The silence

The reunion

The Convention

The Court
Areas of practice
Article 8 · UNCRC
Cases involving the Swedish social services (LVU), removal of custody, family separation, and the right to private and family life under the Convention.
Articles 3, 6, 8, 14
Allegations of inhuman or degrading treatment, denial of a fair trial, discrimination, and breaches of fundamental freedoms by Swedish authorities.
ECtHR procedure
Drafting and filing of admissible applications, just-satisfaction claims, and representation through to Chamber and Grand Chamber proceedings.

Article 8 · ECHR
“Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.”
European Convention on Human Rights
Method
01
Submission of judgments and case file. A reasoned opinion on whether your matter raises a question under the Convention.
02
If the case is admissible, an application is drafted to the Court within the six-month deadline from the final domestic decision.
03
Representation through written observations, oral hearing where granted, and pursuit of just satisfaction under Article 41.
A final word
All initial enquiries are treated in strictest confidence. Correspondence accepted in Swedish, English, and French.
Begin your enquiry