Chattanooga Times Free Press

Iceland riveted as notorious 1828 murder case is retried

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REYKJAVIK, Iceland — Residents on Iceland’s remote farm of Stapakot were jolted awake on March 14, 1828, when a maid from a neighborin­g property burst in to tell them a fire was raging and two men were trapped inside. It was a lie.

The men were already dead — clubbed with a hammer and stabbed 12 times before the house was set ablaze with shark oil.

Despite the years, it’s a crime that Icelanders have never forgotten, since the convicted killers were the last people ever executed on this North Atlantic island nation. Today, the crime is being analyzed by a mock court that will once again weigh the evidence.

The retrial, conducted under modern rules before a three-judge panel, may shed light on the motivation for the slayings, the fairness of the original proceeding, and whether the two maids — Agnes Magnusdott­ir and Sigridur Gudmundsdo­ttir — had been abused by the man they eventually killed.

The case has sparked endless speculatio­n, a feature film and a pop song. The 10th book in Icelandic about the murders is set to be published and a documentar­y is in production. Seats for the retrial have long been sold out. It will be held at the community center in Hvammstang­i, a northweste­rn village near the murder scene.

The handwritte­n court records from the 1828 case are carefully preserved in the National Library.

One of the judges — David Thor, a former judge at the European Court of Human Rights — told The Associated Press the original trial nearly 200 years ago did not address the motivation for the killings. It’s not clear why they killed Natan Ketilsson, a self-taught doctor, and his guest.

“No one cared about the motivation behind the murders — that wouldn’t happen in a modern court,” he said. “Today we would try to understand the motivation behind the murders and particular­ly how the two women, who had no other place to live, were treated by their master.”

The two maids said the act was mastermind­ed by Fridrik Sigurdsson, a 17-year-old who held a grudge against Ketilsson. He and Magnusdott­ir, 32, were put to death for their role in the killings. The other maid, a 16-year-old, was sentenced to life in prison in Denmark.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Illugastad­ir farm is where a chilling double murder took place 187 years ago, near Hvammstang­i village in northweste­rn Iceland.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Illugastad­ir farm is where a chilling double murder took place 187 years ago, near Hvammstang­i village in northweste­rn Iceland.

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