Spy, Murder Victim, Or Something Else? Inside The Decades-Long Mystery Of The Isdal Woman

  


More than 50 years after the Isdal Woman's charred body was found in Norway’s “Ice Valley,” the authorities still don’t know who she was or how she died.

On Nov. 29, 1970 two young girls and their father were hiking through the Isdalen Valley, a few miles outside the city of Bergen, Norway, when they came upon a horrific sight: a woman’s body lying on its back, burned beyond recognition.

The man and his daughters returned to Bergen and reported the body. But unfortunately, this was just the beginning of what would become a decades-long mystery with more questions than answers.

In fact, the more investigators looked into the case, the stranger it became. The woman had left behind a strange trail of coded messages, disguises, and fake identities. Even with DNA testing, police failed to identify the woman.


The case of the Isdal Woman was reopened in 2016, but so far, over 50 years after her body was found, her identity remains a mystery.

Here’s everything we know about the Isdal Woman.

The Horrific Scene In Ice Valley

When police were told of the dead, burned body in the woods, a small party ventured out to retrieve it. Among them was police lawyer Carl Halvor Aas. As of 2016, when the NRK reopened the investigation, he was the last living person from the party.

“The first thing we notice is the stench,” Aas said. “I remember we were walking, and sometimes climbing, up the scree slope. As we hurry along, I’m wondering where we are heading for, because it all seems so steep and impassable. This is no hiking trail, that’s for sure.”

When they reached the body, they began tossing around theories. Some officers wondered whether the woman had fallen into a fire and launched herself backward in a panic. Others wondered if there was a murderer lurking somewhere in the forest.

“It is not a pretty sight,” Aas said. “The question is whether someone set fire to her, or if there are other causes.”

The corpse was sprawled out in a “boxer’s” or “fencer’s position,” with its arms outstretched in front of the upper body — a common position for bodies that had been burnt alive. Nearby, police found the charred remains of the woman’s belongings: bits of clothing, an umbrella, two melted plastic bottles, a half bottle of Kloster Liqueur, a plastic cover for a passport, and more.

But these items offered little insight into who the woman was. In fact, it seemed as if every trace of identification had been deliberately wiped clean. There were no markings on any of her belongings. Manufacturing labels had been cut off the burnt clothing, and even the labels on the bottles had been removed.

Speaking with the BBC, forensic investigator Tormod Bønes noted another odd thing about the woman’s belongings. She had a watch and jewelry, but she wasn’t wearing any of these items. Instead, they were placed beside her.

“The placement and location of the objects surrounding the body was strange,” Bønes said. “It looked like there had been some kind of ceremony.”

Eyewitness reports also did little to help identify the woman. From what police could gather, the woman was around five-foot-four, aged between 25 and 40, with “long brownish-back hair,” a small round face, brown eyes, and small ears. At the time of her death, she wore her hair “in a ponytail tied with a blue and white print ribbon.”

Just who was this woman? What happened to her? And why, despite not having the answers to these questions, did the police close the case after only a few weeks?

Two Suitcases Found Nearby Deepen The Mystery

A few days after the Isdal Woman’s body was found, police made another bizarre discovery: two suitcases left at the Bergen railway station’s luggage department. Inside one, they found prescription-free glasses — and a fingerprint on the lens that matched the Isdal Woman’s.

Finally, it seemed, they were one step closer to learning the woman’s identity.

Alongside the glasses, police found a variety of other items including clothing, wigs, a comb, a hairbrush, cosmetics, eczema cream, teaspoons, and currency from Germany, Norway, Belgium, England, and Sweden.

But once again, Bønes said, “all the labels that could have identified the woman, her clothes, or belongings, had been removed.”

The woman’s name was scratched off of the eczema cream tube, and no major department stores could find a match for any of her clothing. To complicate matters further, police found what appeared to be a coded note among the woman’s belongings, which they cracked later, believing the codes may indicate which hotels she stayed at, and when.

The only useful piece of evidence they found in the suitcases was a plastic bag from Oscar Rørtvedt’s Footwear Store in Stavanger. The owner’s son, Rolf Rørtvedt, recalled that he had sold a pair of boots to “a very well dressed, nice-looking woman with dark hair” who “took a long time” choosing her boots.

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