The murder of Kim Wall, known in Denmark as Ubådssagen (
transl. "The submarine case"),[2] took place on 10 August 2017, after Swedish
freelance journalist Kim Wall boarded the
midget submarineUC3 Nautilus, in
Køge Bugt, Denmark, with the intent of interviewing its owner, Danish entrepreneur
Peter Madsen.
Kim Isabel Fredrika Wall[3] was reported missing after Nautilus failed to return to the harbour at
Refshaleøen,
Copenhagen. The submarine was found sunken the following morning and Madsen was arrested upon being rescued from the water. Between 21 August and 29 November, parts of Wall's
dismembered body were found in different locations around the area. Charged with her murder, Madsen was convicted and sentenced to
life imprisonment on 25 April 2018 by Copenhagen City Court[4] following a widely publicised trial.[5]
On 20 October 2020, Madsen briefly escaped from prison by threatening a prison employee but was surrounded and apprehended by police 500 metres (1,600 ft) from the prison and taken into custody again. In 2020 a
television dramatisation of the case was created by
Tobias Lindholm.
Events
Disappearance and discovery of remains
On Thursday 10 August 2017, Wall and her partner Ole Stobbe were preparing to host a farewell party in Refshaleøen prior to their planned move to
Beijing on 16 August.[6][7][8] Before the party, Wall received a text from Danish entrepreneur
Peter Madsen—with whom she had requested an interview earlier in the year—inviting her to interview him on board his midget submarine UC3 Nautilus. She agreed to join him on the submarine for two hours and boarded Nautilus around 19:00 local time (
UTC+2).[6][9] The submarine never returned to the harbour and Stobbe called the police at 01:43 that night to report Wall missing.[6]Nautilus was sighted in
Køge Bay southeast of
Amager by
Drogden lighthouse at 10:30 the next morning; it foundered at 11:00.[9]
On 21 August, a cyclist found Wall's
torso washed up on a beach in the southwest of
Amager.[9] A post-mortem examination found fifteen stab wounds,[10] mostly in the groin.[11] Metal had been affixed to her torso in an attempt to ensure it did not float.[12] On 6 October, assisted by
cadaver dogs provided by the
Swedish police,[13][14] police divers found two plastic bags in
Køge Bay containing Wall's head, legs, clothes and a knife;[15] six days later, a saw was found in the water.[16] On 21 and 29 November, police divers found Wall's arms in the bay.[17][18][19] Police probed possible links to other murder cases in
Scandinavia, including the unsolved death of 22-year-old Kazuko Toyonaga in 1986 in Copenhagen, but did not find connections to any of them.[20][21][22]
Legal proceedings
Madsen was arrested upon being rescued from Køge Bay after Nautilus foundered on 11 August and was charged with
negligent manslaughter. Police suspected that he had
scuttled the submarine.[23][24] Madsen initially stated that he had dropped Wall off on land,[25] but then admitted to dumping her body at sea after she died in what he claimed was an accident on board Nautilus.[23][24] He testified in a court hearing on 5 September that Wall died after being struck on the head by the submarine's hatch cover.[26] The
prosecution said that police had found videos on Madsen's computer showing women being
murdered,[27] and that witnesses said that Madsen watched
videos of decapitation and practiced
asphyxiation sex.[26] Prosecutor Jakob Buch-Jepsen said that, while forensic investigations had not found any traces of Madsen's
DNA on Wall's body, "... traces of
semen" had been identified on underclothing secured from him after arrest. Madsen asserted that he had not ejaculated in Wall's presence.[28]
A post-mortem examination performed on Wall's head after it was found a month later found no signs of
blunt force trauma[15] and did not determine the
cause of death.[29][30] Madsen subsequently changed his story, admitting to dismembering Wall's body but continuing to deny intentionally killing her, saying that she may have died after poisonous
exhaust gases entered the submarine while he was on deck.[31][32] The post-mortem performed on Wall's torso showed no signs of exhaust gases in her lungs.[33]
On 16 January 2018, Madsen was charged with murder, indecent handling of a corpse, and
sexual assault. The prosecution accused him of having
tortured Wall before killing her by cutting her throat or strangling her.[1][34] Madsen's trial began on 8 March at
Copenhagen Court House.[35] On 25 April, he was convicted of all three charges and sentenced to
life imprisonment.[4] Madsen
appealed his sentence and on 26 September
Østre Landsret, High Court of Eastern Denmark, upheld the sentence.[36][37]
Aftermath
In August 2018, Madsen was admitted to hospital after being attacked in prison by an 18-year-old inmate.[38] In a Danish documentary in September 2020, Madsen admitted that he had killed Kim Wall.[39]
2020 prison escape attempt
On 20 October 2020, Madsen briefly escaped from prison by threatening a prison employee, said to have been a
psychologist, using a "pistol-like object", before fleeing equipped with an object he claimed to be a
bomb belt. The bomb squad was deployed, and Madsen was surrounded and apprehended by police 500 metres (547 yd) from the prison, subsequently being taken back into custody.[40][41]
Legacy
After her death, Wall's family and friends founded the Kim Wall Memorial Fund, aiming to fund female reporters to cover stories of cultural value.[42] A memorial run took place on 10 August 2018, the first anniversary of her murder, in which people around the world ran or walked a distance in her memory.[43][44] In October 2017, Wall was posthumously nominated for
Prix Europa's Outstanding Achievement Award "Journalist of the Year".[45][46] On 9 November 2018, Wall's parents published a book in her memory titled Boken om Kim Wall: När orden tar slut (English: "The book of Kim Wall: When words end").[47] The book appeared in English in 2020 under the title A Silenced Voice and translated by Kathy Saranpa.[48] Also in 2018, Wall's boyfriend Stobbe related his experiences with the media coverage about the case in Danish newspaper Weekendavisen.[49][50]
The Investigation does not feature Madsen or the crime itself, but focuses on the investigative work leading to his indictment and conviction. It has been compared to the 2020 BBC series The Salisbury Poisonings.[51][52] The series was broadcast on UK's
BBC Two between 22 January and 5 February 2021, remaining available on
iPlayer for a year.[53][54]HBO began showing it on 1 February 2021.[55][56]
In March 2022, the TV mini-series Undercurrent: The Disappearance of Kim Wall was released. Directed by
Erin Lee Carr, the series is a documentary that covers both the crime and subsequent trial in two parts. [57][58][59]
In September 2022, the Netflix film Into The Deep: The Submarine Murder Case was released. Directed by Emma Sullivan, the film uses documentary footage of Madsen, his friends and interns, that was being filmed to document his quest to launch a rocket into space using his submarine as a command centre.