Heart Starts Pounding: Horrors, Hauntings, and Mysteries - Murder On The Lake: Finland’s Greatest Unsolved Mystery
Episode Date: July 13, 2023What happened the night of June 4th, 1960, when three teens were murdered at Lake Bodom in Finland? And why has no one ever been charged with the crime? Subscribe on Patreon for bonus content and to b...ecome a member of our Rogue Detecting Society. Follow on Tik Tok and Instagram for a daily dose of horror. Heart Starts Pounding is written and produced by Kaelyn Moore. Music from Artlist Shownotes (with Photos): https://www.heartstartspounding.com/episodes/lakebodom
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Though it was early summer, there was still a chill in the water when Escojo Hansen arrived at Lake
Bodum on June 5th, 1960. It was the Sunday of a holiday weekend, and Esco lived nearby the lake
in the town of Esbu, Finland. He was headed for a swim around 11 a.m. It was typical for
locals to spend their weekends out on the lake once the weather warmed up and the sun came back
after months of perpetual night. Esco turned off the road and trekked through a short patch of woods towards the lake, and
in the distance about halfway between the road and the water, he saw a tent.
That's strange, he thought.
It wasn't common, nor particularly safe for people to camp in these woods.
At first, it looked like whoever was
camping there had given up on taking down their tent. The site was a mess, belonging
strewn everywhere, and the tent was mostly collapsed. He thought he'd check it out, but
as he got closer, something didn't feel right. Laying on top of the tent was a boy, about 18 years old,
with blood on his face, looking as if he had gotten into a terrible fight.
And underneath him, a tangle of three other bloodied bodies.
Esco couldn't make sense of what he was seeing.
His mind was in panic mode. When all of a sudden, the boy on top of the tent took in a sharp breath.
Help me! He gasps and then falls back unconscious.
It's that feeling.
When the energy and the room shifts, when the air gets sucked out of a moment, and everything
starts to feel wrong, it's the instinct between fight or flight.
When your brain is trying to make sense of what it's seeing, it's when your heart starts
pounding. It's not a certain thing. Welcome to Heart Starts Pounding,
a podcast of horrors, hauntings, and mysteries.
I'm your host, Kaelin Moore.
This is a community for people who like to follow
their dark curiosity wherever it leads them.
Those of us that sometimes spend hours in reddit black holes,
creeping ourselves out way past our bed times.
If you'd like to dive further into the community, check out our Instagram and TikTok at
Heart Starts Pounding, or you can join me on Patreon for some bonus content, and what we're calling our
Rogue Detecting Society. I want to tell you a story today about one of Finland's greatest unsolved mysteries.
It's the tale of a summary idyllic weekend that turned deadly.
Four teens that were attacked on a camping trip and the mystery that ensued.
I thought it was fitting as we plunge straight into summer, and if you're listening to this in the future when it's not summer,
I encourage you to build a pillow tent and pillow campfire in your living room and pretend.
Let's dive in.
June 4th, 1960.
It was a beautiful holiday weekend in Esbu, a lakeside town in Finland.
Fourteen sped down a winding road by the lake on motorcycles, heading towards an off-road
spot in a small patch of woods by Lake Bottom.
That's where they were going to set up a tent for the weekend.
The drivers were Nils Gustafson and Sepo Boismann, two 18-year-old boys that had been best friends
for years, and each of them had their girlfriend behind them on their bike as well.
Behind Sapo, with her arms wrapped around him and her brown hair whipping in the wind,
was 15-year-old Tuleki Makki.
She and Sapo had only been dating for a few weeks when she introduced her own best friend,
15-year-old Air Mellie Bjorkland, to Nils.
And now, just a week after planning the trip and a few weeks since they all became official,
the two sets of best friends were kicking off summer with a camping trip.
It was by all accounts, a teenage dream.
But as they made their way through the winding streets, stopping in town to pick up some
booze and food, the locals couldn't help but look at them with suspicious glances.
Sure, Lake Bautom was a beautiful pine tree-lined lake that the community used for fishing and
swimming.
It wasn't common to see outsiders, though. A spoo was a small
town, everyone knew everyone, and maybe that's why they tensed up when they saw the love drunk
giggly teens. A spoo was not the place you'd want to be out past midnight in. What were
they doing camping out there? It was nils who chose the spot. He had remembered coming here once before
on a boys fishing weekend and insisted the couples all come together. If it wasn't safe,
you'd never guess that from the scene the teens saw as they parked their motorcycles by the trees.
They picked out a small clearing and a section of woods that jetted out into the water,
making a little peninsula of land,
and they set up their cozy 4% tent.
The girls jumped in the water, but it was still the early days of summer, and the lake
had just barely warmed up.
So the boys decided to sit it out, opting instead to drink some of the pilsners they picked
up and eat some food.
They watched as other people in the area swam in the lake and rode around on boats.
Nils could feel a shift in the air sometime in the afternoon.
He looked up from his camping bag to see that everyone in the area had cleared out.
It was now completely empty, except for him and his friends.
Where had all the people gone?
That night, the group continued swimming, eating, and Nils and Seppo drank a bit more.
The girls went to bed first, and later, when Nils crawled into the tent, he could hear
Seppo outside, rummaging around in his bag. Nils peaked his head out to see what was happening, and Sapo admitted he couldn't sleep.
His mind was restless, and he wanted to go fishing to relax.
Nils opted to join him, and the two boys sat on the shore drinking and sharing stories.
What Sapo was so anxious about, will never know, but I can imagine it was some of the anxiety
that comes with being a recent high school graduate.
The boys had just finished school and were now hit with some of the responsibilities of
being adults.
They had both gotten jobs that summer to carry some of the financial burden of their families.
Plus, there was the issue of what would happen with their girlfriends.
Sapo already knew that Tulecki's dad didn't like him that much.
On the way to the lake, she had confessed to Sepo that her dad didn't want her to go.
Something about the trip didn't feel right to him.
Sepo couldn't help but figure it had to do with their relationship.
The boys chatted and fished until about 2am when they came back to the
tent, crawled in and fell asleep. I can't imagine Nils knew that of waking up in the hospital.
He fluttered his eyes open as he came to, feeling mostly numb, except for an intense, deep
pain in his jaw.
When he went to open it, he found it too painful to do so.
Why was he here? What about the camping trip? Where were his friends and why did his face feel like
it went through a windshield? Nils' mother and the nurses who were there in the room were happy to see
he was awake, but it quickly became apparent that he had no idea why he was there.
The trauma from a head injury had wiped his memory clear of everything that happened to him after he had fallen asleep.
They all looked at each other, dreading what they were about to tell him.
Nils was informed that Esco Johansson had found the 14s beaten and bloody around 11am the next morning.
The scene Esco came upon was particularly dreadful. Tuffs of hair, blood, and teeth were scattered
around the 14s who were wrapped up in a shredded tent. It looked like someone from outside the tent had taken a knife and sliced through
it to get to the kids. Esco was sure they were all dead. The flies circling the same were
a giveaway. But that's when Nils started moving. He was alive. Esco ran to the nearest
phone and rang the police. Which rooms were his friends in? Nils cried out.
His friends weren't in the hospital.
The nurse informed him.
All of a sudden, Nils' jaw went numb.
His whole body went numb.
He knew what that meant.
This was too much for him to process.
He was still trying to make sense of what happened to him, and now he had to
mourn the death of his girlfriend, her best friend, his best friend. But before he can even think
about all that, the police are on him. Through a haze of pain killers, Nils was interrogated as to
what the hell happened that night. But how could he know what caused any of this? He didn't
remember anything. He didn't even know his friends had died. It was his parents and doctors that
later explained to him that he had a broken jaw and a concussion, which was probably why he couldn't
remember anything. Something had hit him in the head after he had fallen asleep. But this wasn't some freak accident because
he was found with defense wounds. Nils' knuckles were bruised and bloody, meaning that whatever
happened in the early morning hours of June 5th, Nils fought like hell.
The police helped fill in the rest of the gaps for him. He was found at 11 a.m. lying on top of the shredded tent while his friends were all
found still under the tent.
It seemed like whoever did this had a knife as well as a flat stone and both stabbed and
beat his friends to death.
Somehow sparing Nils the worst of it.
Though Nils was hit with something hard, he had no knife wounds on him, unlike his friends.
From the police's calculations, the attack most likely happened between the hours of 4am and 6am.
Nils, however, was not told about the condition his friend's bodies were found in.
That remained a mystery to him
until 2004. He knew that his friends died, but he never knew the graphic details until his 60s.
The police were still putting together what happened at the scene, and the three other teens were
sent in for autopsies. Each teen's belongings were collected and sent back to their families. And when T'Likki's brother got her blanket, he could tell immediately that she was not asleep when
this attack happened. The blanket was covered in kinetic streaks of blood and tuffs of hair that
had been pulled out. Whatever happened, he could tell T'Likki was awake and she was fighting back. So what we know now
after the autopsies had happened is that his friends were found mostly with stab wounds
and blunt hits to the neck and head. All of them had defensive wounds, meaning they
were all awake at the time of the attack. Eirmelli seemed to get the worst of the beating, and when she was found she was also undressed
from the waist down.
It was clear from the tears in the tent that whoever did this was not inside the tent.
They did enter from the outside.
No weapons were found at the scene, but there were two pieces of evidence that were quite
strange.
First, nails shoes were found a few hundred yards from the crime scene,
and they were covered in blood.
It was unclear why that was the only piece of clothing far away from the tent,
and why they were discarded so far away.
And second, there was a strange pillowcase found outside the tent. It had
blood on it, but it was wrapped up and tied on the ends with string, except that
the ties had been cut with a knife. It didn't look like anyone had been using it
as a pillowcase that night. So if the attack happened from someone outside of the
tent, it probably was an intruder, right?
Police immediately were suspicious as to why Nils was the only one without knife wounds.
It turns out there were a few closed door conversations being had about the condition Nils
was found in.
It was weird that his shoes were found so far away from the tent.
Was he leaving the scene?
The nurses had some concerns as well. They had seen people come in with wounds similar to
Nils'. As they described it, his injuries were consistent with getting into a fight or falling
from three to six feet. Neither of those two scenarios had ever resulted in Amnesia as bad as what
Nils was describing. Temporary Amnesia sure, but not remembering a single thing from the event.
That wasn't typical. So suspicions were mounting against Nils, but it was impossible to get any information out of him.
He insisted he didn't remember anything, so they started asking around the community
for more information, and they found that there were a few people out that night who had
seen the campers.
So let's run through what some of the witnesses who were out that morning had to say.
Around 7am, Martin and Ruth Cole were out on the water with their five-year-old daughter.
They saw the tent on the shore from their boat. They could faintly see feet sticking out of the tangled mess, but thought
there had been a bad fight and didn't want to get involved.
Then at 10 a.m., three teens came to the beach when they saw the campsite. They went up close
to the site to see what had happened when they noticed that Nils was lying there in rough
shape. According to them, Nils waved and started speaking gibberish.
The teens also assumed it had been a bad fight and continued on.
So multiple people that morning had seen the group and thought that they had gotten into a horrible
fight and no one called the police until 11am. It's really frustrating to hear, but the worst of the injuries were hidden under the
tent.
They were just seeing nils with his bloodied face.
It may not have been clear from the get-go that three people had been brutally murdered.
So those witnesses can tell us what happened hours after the murder.
But the police were able to track down a few witnesses
who saw the teens earlier in the morning
around the time that the murder happened.
And they noticed something really interesting.
Hike Salinin and Kalevi Hela-Linein
were 16-year-old bird watchers
who were walking around the area at 5.30am the
morning of the murders. At one point, when the two were near the site, Hike heard a voice
that sounded human. When he looked up in the direction of the voice, he saw two motorcycles
up against a tree, as well as a piled- up tent with a young man lying on top of it.
He described the scene similar to what the other witnesses described,
but with one important difference. Headed towards the eastern shore of the cape,
away from the tent, was a man. Hike remembered him as being an adult person dressed in a light shirt or jacket, but
had no other details. The man was 30 meters away from the tent, and from where they stood,
it looked like the man on top of the tent was just a hiker starting to wake up, so they
felt no need to contact authorities. Olavi Kivaladi was a 14-year-old boy who was out at 6am that morning to go fishing, and
he too remembered seeing a man.
He said he was about 50 meters away from a 20- to 30-year-old man who was traveling rather
quickly.
He described him as having a straight-build, straight- light brown hair combed back, dark pants,
and a light jacket.
Olavi didn't mention seeing the tent.
So who was the strange man seen leaving the area of the tent, and how would they ever
find out who that was?
Well, just a day and a half after the attack,
someone was admitted to the hospital
that made all of the nurses suspicious after the break.
On June 7th, 1960, a man by the name of Hans Osman was admitted to a hospital in Helsinki for stomach pain.
He was unconscious when he arrived at the hospital, but it kind of looked like he was
faking it.
His eyes were squeezed shut as
if it were intentional, not like what an unconscious person would be doing. To figure out if
he was really unconscious, one doctor used a highly effective medical technique called
tickling, which got him to wake up immediately. While a nurse was doing intake, she made note of Hans' appearance. For one,
his fingernails were disgusting. It looked like they were caked in dirt, and he had mysterious
red stains all over his clothing. His shoes were also muddied and gross. One nurse said
it looked as if he'd been running through a forest.
Hans was also someone that everyone in the community knew.
He was a German workman who had lived in Finland for 10 years, and in that time, he had
made quite a name for himself.
Mostly, because he had ties to the murder of Kalecki Sarri, a 17-year-old Finnish girl whose body was found in a
bog after she went missing while riding her bike. Hans' car was identical to the car seen at the
bog, but he was never convicted for Kalecki's murder. Hans also mostly fit the description.
He had blonde hair, which could have been mistaken for light brown in the dark and from a distance.
He was 36 at the time of the murders and he had a build that matched what the boys saw.
Hans also lived with his wife in a small house that was on the property of where the teens
were killed.
It was several kilometers away, but he would have almost definitely been in the immediate vicinity.
At the same time that the police were starting to question if Hans was involved,
Nils was being taken away for hypnotherapy.
The police figured if he couldn't remember anything,
maybe a hypnotherapist could help him dig into his memory bank and remember what happened that night.
Hypnotherapy is incredibly controversial in modern forensics, but this was 1960 baby
the heyday of junk psychology.
In 1960, you could be hypnotized to bring up a false memory, a psychologist could tell
you with a straight face that that memory indicated you wanted to
murder your father to marry your mother, and then you could be lobotomized.
All in one weekend.
But in all seriousness, researchers have found that hypnotherapy does bring up as many false
memories as it brings up real ones.
Only it increases patient's confidence in the false memories.
There have been incredible memories recovered, like the bus driver whose bus was hijacked
and buried with 26 kids inside.
Under hypnosis, he was able to recall most of the perpetrator's license plate, which
led to their arrest.
However, many people in the field today are turning their backs on the practice after multiple
people have been put on death row over shotty memories retrieved during hypnosis.
I mention all that to say, take this next part with a grain of salt.
During Mills' hypnotherapy, the police and hypnotherapists were really keen on getting a description
of the man that others had seen.
So in this session, the therapist had Mills relax into a meditative state and then worked
with him to pull details of a face, the jacket, anything he could out of his memory bank.
And Mills started remembering something.
At first, it was screams. Nils could hear the sounds of the girls screaming. He could see the
outside of the tent being ripped with a knife and then he remembered seeing a man enter the tent
And then he remembered seeing a man enter the tent with a knife and what looked like a lead pipe. He said the man had flowy, blonde hair, and big eyes.
Nils was able to describe more of the facial features for a sketch artist who was in the room,
and soon they had a composite sketch of who the man was.
There's no doubt that it does look like Hans, and apparently, Hans thought so too, because
within days of the sketch going wide, he cut his hair short so it didn't match the flyer.
That's not enough though, because the police still do question him. At this point,
they had questioned thousands of suspects. If you lived in the area, it was pretty much
guaranteed that the police were going to be at your door, and they knew Hans lived near
where the murders happened. But, Hans had an iron-clad alibi.
See, Hans was having an affair at the time, and the night of the murders, he wasn't in
his home.
He was with his mistress, who confirmed that he was with her the entire night.
Her brother was at the house too too and substantiated her story.
Police agreed that his alibi was solid.
It couldn't have been haunts.
They instead turned their focus to two other local men who had criminal records and were
known for having short fuses, Arne Loco and Escalonga, but neither of the men seem to
be the guy either.
So they took to the streets, interviewing all of the locals and taking photos of the town.
One of the photos that was taken by police is of a man named Valu Gilström, also known
as the Kiosk man, because he ran a food and drink Kiosk
in town.
The photo is in black and white and shows the Kiosk Man leaning forward, shirtless,
incredulously looking into the camera.
It's hard to tell what he's thinking in the photo.
Is he suspicious of the police?
Or is he hiding something? Police wondered the same
thing, but cleared him after a brief search of his home. Witnesses had only seen this mystery man
walking away from near the scene. No one saw the murders happen happen and it wasn't like they had DNA testing back then.
So with Hans's alibi and no other leads to follow, the case turned cold, fading into
a bitter winter hibernation. But just because there was no DNA testing when the crime happened, doesn't mean that DNA testing
couldn't be used in the case.
Years later, 43 years later to be exact.
In 2003, Nils Gustafsen gets a knock at the door.
It's the police, and a new, younger detective has taken on the case.
And he's come with an important update for Nils.
Nils is being arrested for the murder of his three friends.
And they believe they have the evidence to prove it was him after the break. In 2003, the bottom file came off the back shelf and opened up once again.
It was a case that had been on every police officer's mind over the last 43 years, but
for most of those years, there was nothing they could do.
Most of the suspects had died over the years, including Hans Osman.
But now, four decades later, police had the tools to reopen the case.
Two, really important clues were discovered once the tent was sent to the lab and the bodies
of the three deceased teens were exhumed.
DNA profiles and blood types were able to be collected from the teens, giving a much
more comprehensive view of the tent that night.
Police were now able to see whose blood was where in the tent and confirm exactly whose
DNA was there.
And that's how they discovered the first clue that made them stop in their tracks.
When retesting Nils' shoes, the ones that were found confusingly hundreds of yards from
the tent, they realized his blood wasn't on them, just the blood of his three friends.
And on top of that, they already knew there was no blood inside of his shoes, which made
it seem like he had been wearing them at the time of the attack.
Could nails have been the one attacking his friends?
That would explain the blood not being on the shoes.
Maybe he went outside of the tent, took off his shoes, came back and injured himself to
make it
not look so suspicious.
But and perhaps most shocking of all.
Remember that towel that was found outside of the tent?
The small, wrapped towel that had been sliced with a knife?
On that towel, they found blood from ear-moly.
But they also found DNA from a fifth person,
a man who was not part of their friend group.
Could this prove that there was another person there that night?
The blood on the towel seemed menstrual, leading them to believe earmily had been using it
as a pad, so police collected DNA from Eermeli's ex-boyfriends
and ruled all of them out as suspects.
It was looking like this was not someone
who Eermeli had known intimately.
In a frustrating turn of events, though,
this evidence was used to put Nils on trial
for the murder of his friends.
The shoes seemed damning, and
nils had kind of been acting suspicious over the years. His story of what happened that night
kept changing over the years. He had talked about having stab wounds in his head, not
true. He swore he got dragged out of the tent towards the lake, dropped in the water,
and then dragged back. There was no evidence anyone was dragged from the tent towards the lake, dropped in the water, and then dragged back.
There was no evidence anyone was dragged from the tent that night.
The theory that was developed was that Nils must have been horribly drunk that night,
gotten ragefully jealous, and killed his friends.
The fact that Yermely got the worst of the teens made it seem like a personal attack. Perhaps
she had been flirting with Sepo and Nils couldn't handle it. But what about the fifth person's DNA?
Well, after all these years, police kept questioning Hans Osman's alibi. Even though he had passed
away years prior, police had always had in the
back of their minds that the people corroborating his alibi were maybe coerced into doing so.
And now they were going to have concrete evidence.
In a lab in Finland, a technician opens up a box with an old pair of glasses inside.
In addition, opens up a box with an old pair of glasses inside. Their haunts is sent in by his son who wants answers about his father's involvement in
the case.
He believes that two dark specs on the glasses are blood, and the lab tech agrees.
So now, the tech is going to figure out if he can get a DNA match. Upon initial testing,
he can tell that the spec on the glasses has human DNA. It probably is blood, and
not only that, there's two separate male DNA profiles in the spec. Could one of
them be sepo or nils? Could this be the breakthrough in the case that they've
needed after all this time?
The tech compares the DNA to the boys.
And it's not a hit.
Not only that, but Hans' DNA is not the DNA on the pillowcase.
It wasn't him.
Nils was also found not guilty of the murder. on the pillowcase. It wasn't him.
Nils was also found not guilty of the murder. The theory of Nils doing this in a jealous
and drunken rage was too unbelievable. And then there was the eyewitness testimony of another
man leaving the area. Nils also explained that the reason his story changed so much over
the years was that he still
didn't remember the event.
Everything he knew about that night was from what people had told him and what he read
in newspapers, and not everyone got it right.
DNA evidence also ruled out Arne and Iska.
Both men had sons who submitted their DNA to rule out their fathers.
So now, over 60 years later, we're back to square one.
Still no one has been charged with the murder, and most suspects have been ruled out.
But there is one suspect left that hasn't been completely ruled out.
The man in the black and white photo, the kiosk man from earlier.
Though police ruled him out early on, apparently people in the community continued to talk.
The kiosk man was known for his violent nature around town.
One time he hid razor blades in an apple that he served to children.
His kiosk was also only 800 meters away from where the kids were camping.
The people around town knew not to camp in that area because the kiosk man would cut tent
cords with a long knife, laughing as he watched your tent fall.
And rumor has it, he confessed to the killings.
The kiosk man drowned in Lake Baudum in 1969, and the rumor around a spoo was that he was
having a conversation with a friend when he confessed to the murders.
His friend apparently told him that if it were true, if he were really responsible for
those kids' deaths, he might as well drown himself in Lake Bodom because that would
be better than the life in prison he would live.
And within 20 minutes, he was dead.
Drowned in the lake.
But today, it would be easy to see if his DNA matched the DNA found in the tent.
The only thing is his son won't submit his DNA to police.
They have not been able to get a full DNA profile on the kiosk man.
Everything about this case has been a mystery that's plagued Finland for the last 60 years.
No motive, no murder weapon, hardly any physical evidence, and now almost everyone involved
in the original event has passed away.
And you may be thinking, well, one thing doesn't sound that mysterious, everyone in town felt
like it was one guy, the one guy who didn't submit a DNA profile.
So surely, it must be him.
Well, let's look back to the photo.
The photo police took of the kiosk man was from the day after the murders, and in it,
he's shirtless.
And there's not so much as a scratch on his bare skin.
After how badly it appeared the kids fought that night, it would be nearly impossible
that the killer didn't have scratches or bruises on their skin.
So maybe it wasn't the kiosk man after all. Maybe it was some other stranger who committed the crime and was able to slip away into the
night without a trace.
All we can do is hope that one day we'll get a DNA profile and know for sure. This has been Heart Starts Pounding.
Written and produced by me, Kaelin Moore, Music by Artless.
Special thanks to my new patrons, Katie Maxie Cassandra Claire Nicole Jeremy Jessica Sean Irama Riley Gidget Beth Paul Danielle Juanita
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Danny and Hannah and another special thanks
to Travis Dunlap, Grace and Jornigan
the team at WME and and Ben Jaffy.
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