Gulf News

Danish inventor gets life term for reporter’s murder

IN DENMARK, A LIFE SENTENCE EQUATES TO 16 YEARS, WHICH CAN BE EXTENDED IF NECESSARY

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Danish submarine inventor Peter Madsen was yesterday found guilty of torturing and murdering Swedish reporter Kim Wall before dismemberi­ng her body during a private submarine trip. He was sentenced to life in prison.

Copenhagen City Court Judge Anette Burkoe said she and two jurors unanimousl­y decided Wall’s death was a murder, finding Madsen also guilty of sexual assault and the defilement of a corpse.

“It is the court’s assessment that the defendant killed Kim Wall,” Burkoe told the packed courtroom.

During the 12 days of the trial that began March 8, the court heard testimony that Madsen, 47, lured 30-year-old Wall on to his hand-built submarine with the promise of an interview she had been trying to get for months.

Wall, a freelance journalist who wrote for leading magazines and newspapers, was last seen August 10 waving to her boyfriend and other friends ashore as the submarine sailed off into the Baltic.

Her dismembere­d torso was found days later at sea off Copenhagen, and other body parts were found in plastic bags in October.

“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,” Burkoe told the court.

In Denmark, life equates to 16 years, which can be extended if necessary.

Immediatel­y after the verdict, Madsen’s lawyer, Betina Hald Engmark, told the court she would appeal. The court ordered Madsen kept behind bars during the appeals process.

Throughout the trial Madsen denied murder, saying 30-year-old Wall died accidental­ly inside the submarine.

He changed his story several times. Initially he told authoritie­s that he had dropped her off on shore and did not know what had happened to her.

He then claimed she had died accidental­ly when hit in the head by the submarine’s hatch. Finally, after her decapitate­d head was found by police divers in a weighted-down bag along with her appendages and the skull showed no signs of fracture, he said she had been asphyxiate­d in a malfunctio­n aboard the submarine.

He also initially denied dismemberi­ng her, then confessed that he had done so and said he’d thrown her body parts into the Baltic Sea.

Burkoe noted the discrepanc­ies, saying Madsen “failed to give trustworth­y explanatio­ns.”

 ?? AFP ?? Prosecutor Jakob Buch-Jepsen (centre) speaks with journalist­s at a press briefing in front of the courthouse in Copenhagen after the verdict in the case of Peter Madsen was delivered yesterday.
AFP Prosecutor Jakob Buch-Jepsen (centre) speaks with journalist­s at a press briefing in front of the courthouse in Copenhagen after the verdict in the case of Peter Madsen was delivered yesterday.

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