Thomas Quick: the Swedish serial killer who never was
Sture Bergwall resides in a psychiatric hospital for the criminally insane three hours' drive north of Stockholm. A high wire fence circles the building. CCTV cameras track the movements of the outside world. The narrow windows some of them barred are smudged with dirt and thick with double-glazed glass. In order to visit, you must enter through a succession of automatically locking doors and walk through an airport-style security gate. You must leave your mobile phone in a specially provided locker and hand over your passport in return for an ID tag and a panic alarm. Two members of staff, wearing plastic clogs that squeak across the linoleum, escort you through the corridors.
In the visitors' room, Bergwall sits straight-backed on a small red chair, dim light glinting off rectangular-framed spectacles, his feet planted slightly apart in grey socks and Velcro-strapped sandals. He has been a patient in Säter hospital since 1991 and although he is 62, the flesh on his hands is still pink and unworn, the result, one imagines, of a lack of exposure to sunlight. His hair what is left of it is white.
Occasionally, he leans forward to take a pouch of chewing tobacco from a blue tin on the low table in front of him which he slips underneath his top lip. He smiles more than you might expect, each time displaying a line of small, yellow teeth pushed back like a fence falling in on itself. When he laughs, his shoulders shudder gently in his blue sweatshirt. The overall impression is that of a kindly, slightly shy older man who is eager to please. Does he believe he is criminally insane? Bergwall looks at me, smiles, and then shakes his head. "No." What will he do if he ever gets out of here? "I'll just walk straight ahead and keep going."
Until relatively recently, Sture Bergwall was Sweden's most notorious serial killer. He had confessed to more than 30 murders and been convicted of eight. He called himself Thomas Quick. Assuming this sinister alter ego, he claimed during a succession of therapy sessions at Säter over the years that he had maimed, raped and eaten the remains of his victims, the youngest of whom was a nine-year-old girl whose body has never been found.
Swedish victims: Gry Storvik Gry Storvik, 23. Murdered in Oslo, 1985. Quick was convicted on confession, with no supporting forensic evidence; indeed, semen from her body did not match Quicks DNA. Charges were waived this September
During the 1990s, Thomas Quick confessed to one unsolved murder after another, becoming, in the words of the father of one of his alleged victims, "a ghost who ran through Scandinavia killing more than 30 people". The sadistic murderer was a media sensation and his bespectacled face stared out from front pages and television screens. The newspapers called him "the cannibal". Thomas Quick became Sweden's very own Hannibal Lecter.
But then, in 2001, he stopped co-operating with the police. He withdrew from public view and changed his name back to the one he was born with. In 2008, Hannes Råstam, one of Sweden's most respected documentary-makers, became intrigued. He visited the former Thomas Quick, now known as Sture Bergwall, at Säter, trawled through the 50,000 pages of court documents, therapy notes and police interrogations and came to the startling conclusion that there was not a single shred of technical evidence for any of Bergwall's convictions. There were no DNA traces, no murder weapons, no eyewitnesses nothing apart from his confessions, many of which had been given when he was under the influence of narcotic-strength drugs. Confronted with Råstam's discoveries, Bergwall admitted the unthinkable. He said he had fabricated the entire story.
The book recounting this extraordinary tale has just been posthumously published in Sweden Råstam died aged 56 from cancer of the pancreas and the liver in January, the day after the manuscript was finished. In Thomas Quick: The Making of a Serial Killer, Råstam unpicks in painstaking detail the way in which the deeply troubled Quick was able to gain key information surrounding each case from psychiatrists, police officers and lawyers, before cobbling together the rambling and confused testimonies into a coherent narrative that could stand up in court.
Jenny Küttim, who was Råstam's researcher for three years on the story, was appalled by what they found. "The worst part is that because of people not doing their job, there are a lot of killers out there who never got caught or faced justice," she says.
In a country that has become synonymous with the dogged fictional detectives of Henning Mankell and Scandinavian TV drama, the book has prompted a public outcry and a judicial scandal. Bergwall has now been acquitted of five of the eight murders. Two outstanding cases one for the murder of 15-year-old Charles Zelmanovits, one for the double killing of a Dutch couple on a camping trip have been submitted for review. Bergwall's lawyer, Thomas Olsson, expects the verdicts will be quashed and he will then start fighting for his client's release from the psychiatric hospital in which he has been incarcerated for more than 20 years. According to Olsson, the strange case of the serial killer who never was "raises serious questions about the entire legal system".
But why would a man confess to such sadistic and violent crimes if he was truly innocent? Back in the visitors' room at Säter, Sture Bergwall tries to explain. "It was about belonging to something," he says, speaking in Swedish through a translator. His voice is quiet but insistent and his thoughts are intelligently expressed. I am the first British journalist he has ever spoken to. But it wasn't too hard to get hold of him although he entered Säter before the widespread use of the internet or mobile phones, he now has his own Twitter account.
"I was a very lonely person when it all started," he continues. "I was in a place with violent criminals and I noticed that the worse or more violent or serious the crime, the more interest someone got from the psychiatric personnel. I also wanted to belong to that group, to be an interesting person in here."
Bergwall had always wanted to meld in. He was a teenage misfit. He grew up in a small town in rural Sweden, one of seven siblings raised according to strict Pentecostal beliefs. He describes himself as a "creative and ambitious" child, interested in theatre and writing. At 14, he realised he was gay. Ashamed by his sexuality, he hid it from his deeply religious parents. He started experimenting with drugs amphetamine was his favourite and, at the age of 19, was accused of molesting adolescent boys. Later, he tried to stab a former lover. In 1990, he robbed a local bank dressed in a Santa Claus outfit to feed his addiction. The clerk recognised him. He was incarcerated in Säter hospital for psychiatric treatment. Not a stable individual, then, but not a serial killer at least, not yet.
As a young man, Bergwall had always hankered after being taken seriously and treated as an intelligent person. For a while, he wanted to be a doctor and read up on psychoanalysis. In Säter, he began to realise he could use this knowledge to get the attention and acceptance he craved. "What would you say," he asked his therapist one day in 1992, "if I had done something really bad?"
"That created a reaction, an interest," Bergwall says now. "I said: 'Maybe I murdered someone' and once I'd said that, there was no going back."
Swedish victims: Charles Zelmanovits Charles Zelmanovits, 15. Disappeared from northern town of Piteå in 1976. His remains were found in 1993. Quick was sentenced in 1994 via a confession, with no forensic evidence
The first "murder" Thomas Quick confessed to was that of Johan Asplund, the victim of one of the greatest criminal mysteries in Swedish history. Johan was an 11-year-old boy who went to school one day in November 1980 and disappeared. His body has never been found. During a series of therapy sessions and, later, in police interviews, Quick said he had picked Johan up outside school and lured him into his car before taking him to a wooded area and raping him. Quick claimed he had panicked and strangled the boy, subsequently burying Johan's dismembered body parts so that no one could find them.
But despite forensic technicians searching the locations described by Quick, no remains were ever found. In fact, it took nine years for prosecutors to cobble together a case against Quick he was finally convicted of Johan's murder in 2001. By that time, Quick had already been found guilty of seven other killings. Yet, oddly for a serial killer, there was no obvious modus operandi: Quick killed children and adults, he raped men and women, he used an array of weapons and committed murders in various parts of Sweden and Norway.
In 1996, he confessed to the murder of nine-year-old Therese Johannessen in Norway eight years previously. Quick initially said the girl was blonde and lived in a rural village, despite the fact that she had dark brown hair and lived in a tower block in a heavily urbanised area.
"He got zero right," Bergwall's lawyer, Thomas Olsson, tells me later in the car on the way back from Säter. "He described a totally different situation in all aspects but instead of accepting that, they went on with 15 new interviews."
Olsson, who was brought in to represent Sture Bergwall after he retracted his confessions, has a reputation for taking on difficult cases. With his swept-back hair, bristled face and chain-smoking habit, he is precisely the kind of person one can imagine playing the role of a campaigning Scandinavian lawyer in a film. He drives too fast in a car strewn with empty coffee cups. Although he isn't religious, his wife has insisted he hang a string of rosary beads from his rear-view mirror as a reminder to slow down.
Does Olsson believe Bergwall is dangerous? He snorts. "No! Not at all." Does he like him? "I don't like people too much in general," he says after a pause. "But, of course, if you spend so much time with a client, you always see the person behind the headlines. It all starts with a little boy under a Christmas tree, playing with toys and it ends up very tragic. Somewhere along the line, everyone is a victim."
After "confessing" to the murder of Therese Johannessen, Quick was driven to Norway. The TV cameras followed his every move. He was rapidly becoming one of the most famous men in Scandinavia and revelled in the attention. When Quick claimed he had thrown Therese's body parts in a nearby lake, the Norwegian authorities spent seven weeks' draining it. They found nothing. When a 0.5mm "bone fragment" was discovered in adjoining woodland, it later turned out to be a charred piece of wood. Despite this, Quick was convicted.
Even more curiously, he appeared to have a cast-iron alibi for some of his crimes. Although he confessed to killing a teenage boy in 1964 at the age of 14, it turned out that several witnesses could remember seeing him at holy communion with his non-identical twin sister, some 250 miles away. In fact, there was a photograph showing him there. When he claimed responsibility for the killing of a 23-year-old woman in Norway in 1985, he said he had sex with her despite his stated sexual preference for men. The police had found traces of sperm but a subsequent DNA analysis ruled out the possibility that it belonged to Thomas Quick. And yet the courts once again found him guilty "beyond all reasonable doubt".