Triple murder In the fall of 1999, after a violent attack on his wife and her daughter resulted in him being thrown out of the apartment, Peter moved into the Men's Home in
Nørrebro. While living there, he visited a
brothel on
Fasanvej 239 in
Copenhagen, where he subsequently met Marianne Pedersen, an employee of the brothel. Pedersen and her two sons, Dennis and Brian, lived in the Copenhagen suburb of Rødovre. Lundin and Marianne subsequently became lovers. On July 3, 2000, Pedersen and her sons were declared missing by her older stepson. He contacted police because he was worried that he could not reach Pedersen or the boys on their cellphones. He had found a note on her front door that said they had gone on a vacation. The note was unusually worded and alarmed the stepson, who then went into the house to look for the family. He found the home in disarray with the furniture moved away from the walls, trash lying around, vomit in both toilets, and a strange smell in the basement. After filing a missing person's report, police began investigating the disappearances. Upon an initial search of the house, it appeared there were discrete blood stains scattered around the house. Further investigation revealed blood stains in Pedersen's bed, her car and in the cellar, traces of blood between bathroom tiles and even on a chopping board and a blender in the kitchen. Police went to Lundin's home address and searched the premises. Lundin claimed that Pedersens were on holiday, and that he had agreed to paint their house while they were away. However, on July 5, 2000, Lundin was arrested, charged with murder, and detained for four weeks. Further investigation led to the conclusion that Pedersen and her two sons had been killed and dismembered. The first victim had been dismembered in the basement while the other two were dismembered in the garage. A recently cleaned freezer located in a shed at the Pedersen property also had traces of blood inside. Deputy Chief Inspector Niels Kjøller from
Hvidovre Criminal Police told the press: "Both places looked like slaughterhouses, even though Peter had tried to erase his tracks by cleaning up." From remnants of human tissue, the police technicians were able to observe that Lundin had used an
angle grinder in the garage, and there were about 100 visible cutting marks on the floor, revealing that he had used an axe. Lundin changed his explanation after three weeks. He explained that he had heard screams from the basement at night between June 16 and 17, 2000. In the basement, he found the two boys lying on the floor. They had been stabbed by Marianne, whom he claimed had ingested drugs and was unconscious. He then began to beat her because she had killed the boys. He said that, although he had not struck her "seriously," she died shortly after. He did not call the police as he thought they would not believe his story because of his past and had instead decided to dismember the bodies. On October 10, 2000, he confessed to killing them. He explained that he had quarrelled with Marianne because she "had spoken sweetly" on the phone with another man. Subsequently, Lundin fought with Pedersen and her sons on her double bed, where he broke their necks with his bare hands. After the murders, he placed the bodies in the freezers located in the home. This story was not quite corroborated by forensic evidence, however, as it was reasonably determined that one of the boys had died in the basement, and investigators found it unlikely that he had broken their necks the way he claimed. On June 19, 2000, Lundin went shopping at a
Metro in
Glostrup, where he bought an axe, rubber gloves, plastic bags and cleaning agents. After dismembering the bodies. Lundin put the body parts in plastic bags, which he then placed in bulk waste containers outside the house. These were then taken for
incineration. He probably drove further around
Zealand in Marianne's
Ford Mondeo and placed smaller body parts in various waste containers. About 10,000metric tons (roughly ) of refuse were investigated at Vestforbrænding, as well as at a waste site in Holme-Ostrup near
Næstved. In addition, with the help of the
Danish Emergency Management Agency, the entire
Vestvolden was searched. However, the bodies of Pedersen and her two sons have never been recovered. ==The trial==