
Murder Without a Body: Inside Denmark's Most Controversial Verdict
How two men were convicted of killing Henrik Haugberg Madsen with no corpse and no forensic evidence — raising questions about conviction standards across Scandinavia
In 2010, Henrik Haugberg Madsen vanished after spending time at a summer cottage near Karrebæksminde on Denmark's southeast coast. What followed was not a straightforward missing-persons investigation, but rather a murder trial that would become defined by its absence of physical proof.
Two men—Bo Madsen and Claus Stokholm Larsen—were convicted of his murder. The remarkable aspect of this case lies in what prosecutors did not have: no body, no established crime scene, and crucially, no decisive forensic evidence linking either defendant to the alleged homicide.
**An Outlier in Scandinavian Justice**
Danish legal experts have described the case as unique in the country's criminal history. While circumstantial evidence and witness testimony can support convictions in most legal systems, the Madsen case pushed the boundaries of what Denmark's courts consider sufficient grounds for a murder conviction.
The prosecution's case rested heavily on witness accounts, including testimony from a witness who became known in media coverage as "Pulverheksen" (the Powder Witch). The credibility of these witnesses, however, remains contested—and that contestation is precisely why a new documentary series is generating renewed attention.
**The Role of Documentary Scrutiny**
"Drabet uden lig" (Murder Without a Body), a six-part documentary series produced by Dokumentarkompagniet and directed by Jacob Kragelund, has reopened public discussion about the case's foundation. The series examines the trial from Madsen's disappearance through to conviction, interrogating the evidence—or lack thereof—that secured guilty verdicts.


