Danish investigators have announced that divers discovered bags containing the head, arms, legs, and clothing of reporter Kim Wall. She disappeared in August while aboard the crowdfunded submarine UC3 Nautilus with Peter "Rocket" Madsen, the sub's designer. The bags were found not far from where Wall's dismembered torso washed ashore 10 days after the Nautilus was deliberately sunk by Madsen near Copenhagen on August 11.

An examination of Wall's head found "no sign of fracture," according to a statement by Copenhagen police inspector Jens Moller Jensen, or "any sign of other blunt violence to the skull". That would appear to contradict Madsen's contention that Wall died when he accidentally dropped a hatch on her head as she was climbing out of the sub after a dive.

The bags were weighted down with "car pipes," Inspector Jensen told reporters. They also contained a knife. An earlier autopsy of Wall's torso showed that she had been stabbed in the ribcage and genitals.

On October 3, prosecutor Jakob Buch-Jepsen told a judge in a court hearing on the case that videos showing the torture and beheading of women were found on a hard drive at RML Spacelab, Madsen's sub-orbital space and engineering venture. Madsen said that the video files were not his and that others working at the lab had access to the computer.