Ian Granstra:
Analyzes Murders, Missing People, and More Mysteries.

A Prime Crime

by | Feb 6, 2024 | Mysteries, Unsolved Murders | 0 comments

The nation’s Chief Executive is shot while in public and is rushed to the hospital. Doctors work feverishly but are unable to save him. A shocked nation goes into mourning. Years after the assassination, conspiracy theories abound as to who was responsible.

Such an occurrence describes the globally known assassination of United States President John F. Kennedy in 1963. The description, however, also describes a murder occurring in 1986 which, outside of Scandinavia, is lesser known.

The Prime Minister of Sweden is the Nordic country’s equivalent of the President of the United States. Thus, the assassination of Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme can rightfully be compared to that of President Kennedy.

A cornucopia of conspiracy claims continues to surround both crimes. One huge factor, however, separates the two assassinations. History has officially closed the book on the Kennedy assassination, but the murder of Prime Minister Palme is still unsolved.

Olof Palme

Prime Minister of Sweden

Olof Palme became Prime Minister of Sweden in 1969, a position he held until his murder seventeen years later. He was the leader of the left-wing Swedish Social Democrat Party.

Palme’s reign coincided with the escalation of Cold War tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union. He adopted a policy of non-alignment with both superpowers and spoke critically of both countries’ foreign policies.

Palme drew the particular ire of the United States when he became the first Western head of state to visit Cuba following the 1959 revolution bringing Fidel Castro to power. His speech praising the revolutionaries was not well received by America.

 

Seventeen Year Tenure 

Prime Minister Palme greatly valued his independence and was determined to live as ordinary of a life as was possible for a head of state. He was often seen in public without bodyguard protection; the evening of February 28, 1986, was one such occasion. Despite protests from his entourage, the Prime Minister gave his protectors the evening off as he looked forward to a night at the movies with his family.

 

Unprotected In Public

That evening, Palme and his wife Lisbeth met their son Marten and his girlfriend at Stockholm’s Grand Cinema where they watched the comedy The Mozart Brothers. After the movie ended at approximately 11:00, the foursome chatted for fifteen minutes before the two couples headed their separate ways.

Olof and Lisbeth Palme began walking toward the Hötorget metro station. After crossing the street, the Palmes briefly stopped to gaze at some displays in a shop window before continuing past a corner deli.

Grand Cinema

Stockholm, Sweden

Several minutes later, officially at 11:21 p.m. according to Swedish authorities, a man approached the couple from behind and twice shot the Prime Minister in his back at point-blank range. After firing a third shot which grazed Mrs. Palme, the perpetrator jogged into the darkness.

An Artist’s Depiction of the Assassination

Paramedics quickly arrived on the scene and rushed Sweden’s first couple to Sabbatsberg Hospital. The shots had severed the Prime Minister’s spinal column and aorta, and he was pronounced dead. Lisbeth Palme was not seriously wounded.

The Swedish First Couple Are Shot

Multiple people witnessed the shooting but could provide only vague descriptions of the assassin. He was generally described as between thirty-to-fifty-years-old, six-feet to six-feet-two-inches tall, one-hundred-eighty-five to two-hundred pounds, and wearing a dark jacket or coat. The descriptions varied so greatly that police deemed them insufficient to develop a composite sketch of the suspect.

The shots were determined to have probably been fired from a Winchester-Western .357 Magnum 158 grain metal piercing revolver. The two bullets recovered from the street were the only forensic evidence as such weapons do not automatically eject cartridge cases.

Based on the bullets’ lack of certain characteristic deformations, investigators concluded the shots had been fired from a barrel no shorter than four inches, meaning the murder weapon would have been a conspicuously large handgun.

A .357 Magnum

Thirty-three-year-old Victor Gunnarrson, a right wing extremist who hated Palme’s polices, was immediately declared the prime suspect in the murder. He matched the general description of the assassin and a witness placed Gunnarsson at a bar near the Grand Cinema that evening, voicing his discontent about the Swedish leader to anyone who would listen.

Gunnarrson was arrested but soon released after no one picked him out of a police lineup. Nothing linked him to the killing, but he was guilty in the eyes of public opinion.

Ostracized and unable to find work in his home country, Gunnarsson moved the United States, settling in Salisbury, North Carolina, a town of approximately 33,000 people in the west-central part of the Tar Heel state. In January 1994, his near-naked body was found in a wooded area approximately ninety miles from his home. He had been shot twice in the head with a .22 caliber firearm.

Olof Palme’s murder has been called the Swedish equivalent of the John F. Kennedy assassination. Gunnarsson, however, was not the likely assassin and he was not silenced for the same reason many believe Lee Harvey Oswald was killed. Instead, Gunnarsson was shot to death by a jealous former boyfriend of the woman he had recently begun dating.

Regardless, many in Victor Gunnarsson’s homeland still believe his murder was poetic justice. Despite his disdain for Olof Palme, no evidence has been found linking him to the assassination.

Victor Gunnarsson

In December 1988, almost three years after Prime Minister Palme’s assassination, an alcoholic and drug user named Christer Pettersson was charged with the murder after Lisbeth Palme picked him out of a lineup as her husband’s killer. Pettersson, who had previously been convicted of manslaughter, was convicted of Palme’s murder, but the verdict was overturned on appeal the following year.

The Swedish appellate court cited several reasons for reversing the lower court’s decision.

• Failure of the prosecution to produce the murder weapon;
• Lack of a motive for the murder;
• Doubts about the reliability of Mrs. Palme’s identification of Pettersson and her testimony; and
• “extremely gross errors” by the police in arranging the photo lineup.

In the late 1990s, several people came forward saying Pettersson had confessed to killing the Prime Minister, allegedly telling associates it was a case of mistaken identity as he had intended to kill fellow drug dealer Sigvard Cedergren, who resembled the Swedish leader and who often walked along the same route the Prime Minister was walking that evening. The claims, however, were made by petty criminals who altered their stories, and officials deemed them uncredible.

Pettersson was awarded $50,000 in compensation for defamation by the police and for wrongful imprisonment. He quickly squandered his windfall on alcohol and drugs, but was able to augment his income through media interviews.

In 1998, the Swedish Supreme Court rejected an appeal to retry Pettersson. He died from a cerebral hemorrhage in 2004, legally declared not guilty in the assassination of Prime Minister Olof Palme.

 

Christer Pettersson

• He was silenced by the CIA for his support of communist Cuba.
• As the United Nations mediator seeking an end to the Iran-Iraq war, he was
assassinated because he fell afoul of Iran-Contra.
• He was taken out by an operative of the former Yugoslavian security service.
• He was killed by the South African Cooperation Bureau for speaking out against Apartheid.
• His murder was linked with arms trades to India.
• He was killed by Chilean Fascists for granting asylum to leftist
Chileans following the overthrow of Salvador Allende in 1973.
• He was killed by a conspiracy among Swedish right-wing extremist police officers.
• He was killed by militants of the PKK (Kurdish Worker’s Party) for the arrests of Kurds living in Sweden.

Conspiracy Theories

Olof and Lisbeth Palme had been married for thirty years at the time of his assassination.

Lisbeth did not remarry. She died in October 2018 at age eighty-seven, still believing Christer Pettersson was the man who had murdered her husband.

 

Lisbeth Palme

On June 10, 2020, Swedish prosecutors announced the investigation into the murder of Prime Minister Olof Palme is closed, stating there is “reasonable evidence” to believe the assassin to be Stig Engström, who had committed suicide in 2000 at age sixty-six.

Engström was born in British India to affluent Swedish parents who later returned to their home country. He and Olof Palme attended the same elite school, though not at the same time.

At the time of the assassination, Engstom worked as a graphic designer at the Skandia Insurance Company, near the Grand Cinema where the shooting occurred. Known in legal circles as “Skanida Man” he was one of approximately twenty people who claimed to witness the assassination. He was briefly a person of interest, but he was soon dismissed as an unreliable witness and a publicity-seeker.  After re-interviewing witnesses and reexamining evidence, prosecutors said Engstrom wore clothing similar to witness descriptions of the killer’s and that his account of his actions that evening was suspicious.

Swedish Chief Prosecutor,Krister Petersson, (different spelling and no relation to Christer Pettersson), stated the evidence against Engström would have been too circumstantial for a trial but would have been sufficient to detain and question him if he were living. No theory as to how Engström had acquired a gun was surmised nor was a motive for the murder, but Engstom was a critic of the Prime Minister’s policies.

Stig Engstrom

Olof and Lisbeth Palme are buried at the Adolf Fredriks kyrkogård cemetery in Stockholm, Sweden.

A memorial plaque at the crossing of Sveavägen and Tunnelgatan streets in Stockholm where Palme was shot reads, “Here, Sweden’s Prime Minister Olof Palme was murdered, on 28 February 1986.”

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6073/olof-palme# 

 

 

 

Memorial To the Slain Leader

 

 

Scandinavia’s Prime Crime

Deputy Prime Minister Ingvar Carlsson succeeded the slain Olof Palme as Prime Minister of Sweden. He led the country until 1991 and again from 1994-96, during which time he  Sweden entered into the European Union (EU.)

Ingvar Carlsson

 

SOURCES:
• Dagens Nyheter
• Los Angeles Times
• New York Times
• Newsweek Magazine
• Stockholm City
• Time Magazine
• Washington Post

 

 

 

 

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My name is Ian Granstra.

I am a native Iowan now living in Arkansas. Growing up, I was intrigued by true crime/mystery shows and enjoyed researching the featured stories. After I wrote about some of the cases on my personal Facebook page, several people suggested I start a group featuring my writings. My group, now called The Mystery Delver, now has over 55,000 members. Now I have started this website in the hope of reaching more people.

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