Submarine killer Peter Madsen gets 21 months for prison escape
By Joshua Rhett Miller
New York Post
February 9, 2021
A Danish court on Tuesday tacked on 21 months to murderous inventor Peter Madsen’s life sentence for his ill-fated prison escape last year.
Madsen, 50, was sentenced for his brief Oct. 20 escape
from Denmark’s Herstedvester prison outside Copenhagen, where he was
serving a life sentence for the 2017 slaying of journalist Kim Wall
after inviting her aboard his 60-foot UC3 Nautilus for an interview, tabloid Ekstra Bladet reported.
Madsen told the Glostrup City Court he busted out of the lockup after
starting to plan his escape in March 2019 due to poor conditions for
inmates serving life sentences.
Authorities said Madsen — who has admitted to dismembering Wall, 30,
but denied murdering her – was armed with a fake pistol and explosives
during his escape that lasted just five minutes.
Peter Madsen sits up against a fence surrounded by police forces in Albertslund, Denmark after a failed prison escape.
Kim Wall was killed by Peter Madsen after being invited aboard his UC3 Nautilus submarine for an interview.
He threatened a prison psychologist and an officer with an imitation
pistol made out of plaster material, the newspaper reported Tuesday.
Madsen also had a “bogus” explosives belt on him at the time,
consisting of brushes, wires and other materials fashioned to look like
the real thing, according to the report.
In addition to the 21-month sentence, Madsen was also ordered to pay
restitution to the prison psychologist whom he threatened to kill during
his escape attempt., which ended less than a half-mile away from the
prison.
Madsen had claimed Wall died from taking in toxic fumes on his
custom-built sub, but prosecutors insisted he tortured the journalist
due to violent sexual fantasies after luring her aboard the watercraft.
Prosecutors said the self-taught engineer who later lost his appeal
in Wall’s murder had fantasies of spitting on women, Ekstra Bladet
reported. Evidence at trial reportedly showed Wall’s body had also been
impaled.
The journalist’s dismembered torso was discovered days later in
waters off Copenhagen, while other body parts stuffed in weighted bags
were recovered in ensuing months.
Madsen has since been transferred to a higher-security prison in Falster, Ekstra Bladet reported.
Life sentences in Denmark typically equate to 16 years in prison, but
inmates can be kept longer if they’re deemed to be a threat to society.
2 comments:
So he broke out of prison because he didn't like the accommodations. Sounds reasonable to me.
This guy is a self taught fuck up.
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