The Scotsman

Danish inventor blames ‘drop in pressure’ for journalist’s death

● Denies murder of Swede in his submarine off Copenhagen

- By JAN OLSEN

The Danish inventor accused of torturing and killing Swedish journalist Kim Wall during a private submarine trip before dismemberi­ng her body is an intelligen­t man “with psychopath­ic tendencies,” a prosecutor said as the murder trial opened yesterday.

Peter Madsen, 47, was standing trial at Copenhagen City Court accused of torturing Ms Wall, 30, before he either cut her throat or strangled her on his submarine in August.

The inventor is charged with murder, dismemberm­ent and indecent handling of a corpse. He denies murder, but has admitted to dismemberi­ng her body before he “buried her at sea”.

Ms Wall, a freelance journalist who wrote for the New York Times, the Guardian and other publicatio­ns, embarked on Madsen’s submarine on 10 August to interview him.

Her remains were found in plastic bags on the Baltic Sea bed weeks later, and her torso was found to have been stabbed multiple times.

Prosecutor Jakob Buchjepsen started the 12-day trial by reading out the charges, describing in detail how Ms Wall’s body parts were found on the ocean bed. He said a psychiatri­c report has concluded that Madsen has “no empathy or feelings of guilt”.

Madsen, wearing glasses, a dark shirt and jeans, listened quietly with his fists closed. Ms Wall’s parents were also present at the trial.

Testifying, Madsen repeated his claim that Ms Wall died accidental­ly inside the UC3 Nautilus while he was on deck. He said Ms Wall “had a wonderful evening until it ended in an accident”, but denied that any sexual activity had taken place between them.

Madsen had offered shifting explanatio­ns for Ms Wall’s death prior to the trial. He initially told authoritie­s he had dropped Ms Wall off on a Copenhagen island several hours into their submarine trip. Then he said that Ms Wall died accidental­ly inside the submarine when a hatch fell and hit her on the head. Yesterday, he described how he found Ms Wall lifeless after a sudden pressure problem in the submarine.

“I could not open the hatches. I heard Kim, it was not good,” he said. He added that he tried to give her first aid when he finally reached her, but stopped because it was impossible to stay inside.

“There was a risk of having a submarine with two deaths,” he told the court.

The prosecutio­n claims Wall’s murder was premeditat­ed because Madsen brought along tools he normally didn’t take when sailing.

Mr Buch-jepsen said the cause of Ms Wall’s death has yet not been establishe­d. But he said her blood was found on Madsen’s nose and his bodysuit, and he also said that detectives found violent videos and texts about killing women on Madsen’s laptop and an external hard drive.

Members of the court were shown a drawing of the multiple stabs wounds to Ms Wall’s torso. An audio file of a radio exchange between Madsen and maritime officials from the day after Madsen and Ms Wall embarked on the trip was also played. In it, Madsen said he had let Ms Wall off on an island, and that there were no injured persons aboard but only technical problems.

 ??  ?? 0 Prosecutor Jakob Buch-jepsen outside the Copenhagen court
0 Prosecutor Jakob Buch-jepsen outside the Copenhagen court

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