Texarkana Gazette

Iceland riveted as a notorious 1828 murder case retried

- By Egill Bjarnason

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 that 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. On Saturday, the crime is being analyzed by a mock court that will once again weigh the evidence.

The retrial, conducted under modern rules before a threejudge 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 tenth 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 that 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.

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 case highlights differing attitudes toward capital punishment. In modern Iceland, the usual prison sentence for murder is 16 years or less. But in 1828, officials successful­ly argued for the death penalty, which had not been imposed in decades.

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