Amateur Sleuths Deploy AI to Crack the Unsolved Murder of Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme

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Forty years after Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme was shot dead in Stockholm, amateur investigators are turning to Artificial Intelligence to solve the cold case. A crime podcast team has developed an AI engine capable of analyzing 30,000 case documents in under a second, hoping to uncover new leads and pressure authorities to reopen the investigation that was officially closed in 2020.

Amateur Sleuths Turn to AI for New Leads in Cold Case

Four decades after Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme was gunned down on a Stockholm street on February 28, 1986, his unsolved murder continues to haunt Sweden. The unsolved 1986 murder remains one of the most perplexing cold case mysteries in European history, with theories ranging from political assassination to the work of a lone gunman. Now, amateur sleuths are deploying Artificial Intelligence to analyze case documents and identify new leads that might finally bring closure to this decades-old enigma

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Source: Reuters

Source: Reuters

The team behind the crime podcast Spår ("Track") has developed an AI engine in collaboration with Swedish and Belgian software firms specifically designed to investigate leading theories about Olof Palme's assassination. "This is about the murder of our leader, a democratically elected prime minister. You can't just close the case," said Anton Berg, co-presenter of the podcast

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. The amateur investigators hope their AI-powered approach will convince authorities to reopen the investigation, which prosecutors officially shut down in 2020.

AI in Forensics Transforms Criminal Investigation Capabilities

The AI engine developed for investigating the Palme case represents a significant advancement in digital forensics. It can analyze approximately 30,000 publicly available digital documents in less than a second—a task that would otherwise require a decade of human reading time, according to police estimates

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. The entire case files span roughly 500,000 pages, making traditional investigative methods impractical for amateur investigators working outside official channels.

The system mimics a team of human investigators, probing evidence, evaluating findings, and identifying gaps with unprecedented speed. Lena Klasen, former head of Sweden's National Forensic Centre and now Adjunct Professor in Digital Forensics at Linkoping University, describes the technology's potential impact: "It is going to change how we work in the way that computers did. But this is bigger"

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. The approach follows successful precedents like the 2018 Golden State Killer case, where AI-assisted DNA profiling helped Los Angeles police apprehend Joseph DeAngelo, who had murdered 13 people and raped at least 50 victims years earlier.

Challenges Facing AI-Powered Investigation Efforts

Despite the technological capabilities, significant obstacles remain. Simon Lundell, part of a separate group of amateur investigators also using AI in the Palme case, notes that case files are heavily redacted and vast quantities of material remain unpublished

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. Access to police files is restricted to approximately 1,000 pages per year, meaning it would take hundreds of years to review all available information at the current release rate.

Three public commissions have concluded that police bungled the early investigation into the unsolved murder, with documents lost and leads not followed up. "There is no technique that can help with information that isn't there, and that is a big part of the problem that there are gaps in the information," said Lennart Gune, Director of Prosecution at the Swedish Prosecution Authority

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. Gunnar Wall, who has written several books on the Palme killing, summarized the frustration: "We don't know any more than we knew on the day of the murder, essentially."

Privacy Concerns and the Future of AI Surveillance

The use of AI in investigations raises important privacy concerns that Sweden is actively grappling with. The Golden State Killer case sparked fierce debate after millions of people had their DNA data scanned without explicit consent through genealogy databases

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. In 2025, Sweden proposed legislation allowing police to use real-time, AI-powered face-recognition as a tool to fight gang crime, though its application will be limited due to privacy concerns and surveillance considerations.

Swedish police have declined to confirm whether they've used AI in the Palme case. The investigation will not be reopened unless there is good reason to believe it would lead to an arrest and conviction. On Saturday, marking the 40th anniversary of Palme's death, protesters plan to deliver a petition to parliament urging authorities to reopen the investigation. While Spår has announced no breakthrough yet, Berg remains optimistic about AI's learning capabilities: "Our hope is that this tool will get so advanced that we can open up the investigation again"

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. The convergence of fingerprinting, DNA profiling, and now AI-driven analysis suggests that even decades-old mysteries might yield to technological persistence, though success remains far from guaranteed.

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