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DNA from decapitated body matches missing journalist, Danish police say

Journalist Kim Wall was last seen alive on a submarine in Copenhagen, Denmark, with inventor Peter Madsen. Police confirmed Wednesday that a dismembered body found on Monday is her. Officers said it had air forced from it and metal attached in an effort to sink it. DNA tests confirmed that a torso — headless, and with no limbs — which washed up on Monday was Wall. She was last seen getting on a home-made submarine, the UCS Nautilus, with its owner and builder, Danish inventor Peter Madsen. Madsen has been charged with Wall's manslaughter, which he denies.
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DNA from a headless torso found washed up on an island near Copenhagen matches that of missing Swedish journalist Kim Wall, Danish police said Wednesday.

At a press conference, chief investigator Jens Møller Jensen said police had linked the victim to the torso with DNA obtained from her toothbrush and hairbrush.

He said the body had apparently been punctured to let the air out before sinking it, and it was weighted down in a presumed attempt to prevent it floating.

 

Wall, 30, had boarded a 17-meter, privately built submarine on August 10 for a story she was writing about its inventor, Peter Madsen.

She was last seen in an image that allegedly showed her standing in the tower of the submarine in Copenhagen Harbor.

Police had earlier said the body appeared to to have been deliberately dismembered. Blood found on the submarine was also a match for Wall, Møller Jensen said.

A passing cyclist found the torso Monday afternoon on the southwest side of Amager island near the Danish capital.

An ongoing mystery

Madsen, who has been charged with manslaughter, told a closed-door court hearing Monday that Wall had died in an accident and was buried at sea in an "unspecified place" in Køge Bay, according to a statement.

Madsen, 46, originally claimed he had dropped her off on land later that night, according to a police statement.

But police later said Madsen had provided them with a "different explanation."

The inventor was charged with manslaughter and ordered to be held in custody for 24 days.

His lawyer Betina Hald Engmark told Denmark's TV2 at the time that her client "accepts the arrest but still denies the crime."

According to CNN's Swedish affiliate Expressen, the submarine was found at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, August 11, 15 hours after it had departed Copenhagen.