The Bodom Murders
Band News
Man charged in killings that inspired CHILDREN OF BODOM's name
Matti Huuhtanen of The Associated Press has issued the following report:
The
killing of three teenage camping companions found stabbed to death
inside a tent 45 years ago has haunted Finland for decades — spawning
books, conspiracy theories and even the name of a rock band [CHILDREN OF BODOM].
On
Tuesday (August 16), a 63-year-old man who was also found in the tent
that day — unconscious, stabbed 10 times and with a crushed jaw — was
charged with murder in the deaths.
Nils Gustafsson denies
committing the killings, but told reporters at Espoo District Court
near Helsinki that he cannot remember what happened on the fatal night
in 1960.
"I'm innocent, and that's that," Gustafsson
said, appearing weary and tense. "My last memory is of when we went to
bed and wished each other a good night. After that, I don't remember if
it was Wednesday or Thursday when I woke up."
The bodies of two
15-year-old girls and an 18-year-old male were found with multiple stab
wounds inside a tent by Lake Bodom in Espoo. Gustafsson, then 18, was found in the same tent.
The murder weapon was never discovered, and Gustafsson's shoes were found 800 yards from the tent, said his lawyer, Riitta Leppiniemi. "He was very badly injured and could not have done what he is being charged with."
The story of the stabbings has generated great public interest and speculation for decades. A popular heavy metal band, CHILDREN OF BODOM, was named after the murders.
Finland has no statute of limitations for murder, and the case was reopened after DNA samples taken from Gustafsson's shoes were analyzed by forensic experts in Britain earlier this year. The trial is expected to take several weeks.
If found guilty, Gustafsson faces a life sentence.
The
defense maintains evidence points to the existence of a fifth person at
the tent. All four were initially believed to have been victims of an
outside attacker.