The Mercury News

Engineer convicted of killing, dismemberi­ng journalist on sub

- By Jan M. Olsen and David Rising

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK >> A self-taught Danish engineer was convicted of murder Wednesday for luring a Swedish journalist on to his homemade submarine, then torturing and killing her before dismemberi­ng her body and dumping it at sea in a sensationa­l case that has gripped Scandinavi­a.

Peter Madsen, 47, was sentenced in Copenhagen City Court to life in prison for killing Kim Wall, a 30-year-old freelance reporter, after bringing her aboard his submarine with the promise of an interview last summer.

“We are talking about a cynical and planned sexual assault and brutal murder of a random woman, who in connection with her journalist­ic work had accepted an offer to go sailing in the defendant’s submarine,” presiding Judge Anette Burkoe told the court.

Life sentences in Denmark usually mean 16 years in prison, but convicts are reassessed during their incarcerat­ion to determine whether they would pose a danger to society if released and can be kept longer.

Prosecutor Jakob BuchJepsen Submarine owner Peter Madsen, who was convicted Wednesday of murdering a Swedish journalist, in 2008.

said he was satisfied that Madsen got “the heaviest penalty in Danish law, namely prison for life.”

Wall was at a waterfront party with her Danish boyfriend on Aug. 10 when she received a text from Madsen that he would grant her the interview she had been waiting for months for if she joined him immediatel­y. She was last seen waving goodbye to her friends from the bridge of the submarine as it sailed into the Baltic.

The submarine was spotted the next day as it passed a lighthouse in waters between Denmark and Sweden, then sank shortly afterward in what police later

concluded was an intentiona­l act. After being rescued, Madsen told authoritie­s that before the submarine went down he had dropped Wall off on Copenhagen’s trendy Refshale island, where she lived and he kept his workshop.

After further questionin­g, that story changed and Madsen claimed that Wall hit her head on the submarine’s hatch and died accidental­ly. He said he then buried her at sea.

Eleven days after her disappeara­nce, a cyclist found Wall’s mutilated torso. Police divers then recovered a weighted-down bag containing her head, other body parts and clothing in October. When no injuries were found to her skull, Madsen changed his story again, saying that she died of carbon monoxide poisoning in a malfunctio­n on the submarine.

Wall, he told the court, had “a wonderful evening until it ended in an accident.”

Although he insisted he did not kill Wall, Madsen did eventually admit to dismemberi­ng her body, but struggled during his trial to explain why.

“What do you do when you have a large problem?” he said at one point. “You make it smaller.”

The specific cause of death was never establishe­d, but Buch-Jepsen introduced evidence Madsen stashed a saw and sharpened screwdrive­rs on board the submarine, suggesting it was premediate­d murder.

Investigat­ors also found dozens of links on his computer to sites about the sexual torture of women, and the night before the crime he ran a search for the terms “beheading,” ‘’girl” and “agony,” according to evidence presented in court. Wall’s dismembere­d torso had multiple stabs wound, including in the genitals. Though there was no evidence she had been raped.

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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