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Kidnapping of Minna Nurminen

2009 kidnapping in Finland


Summary

2009 kidnapping in Finland

FieldValue
titleKidnapping of Minna Nurminen
locationEtu-Töölö, Helsinki, Finland
date
typeKidnapping
victimMinna Nurminen, aged 26
perpetratorJuha Turunen
motiveRansom of eight million euro

The kidnapping of Minna Nurminen took place in Helsinki, Finland on 27 May 2009.

Kidnapping

Minna Nurminen, a 26-year-old member of the wealthy Herlin family, owners of KONE Corporation, disappeared from her home in Etu-Töölö, Helsinki, on 27 May 2009. She was reported missing on 30 May, and later found on 13 June, in a forest in Rusko.

The kidnapper was identified as Juha Turunen (born 22 September 1964 in Turku, now known as Juha Louhi), a former SDP city council candidate living in Turku.

Police arrested Juha Turunen and he confessed to the kidnapping. He is said to have asked for a ransom of 8 million euro for Nurminen, which her family paid him. Part of this ransom, in the form of 100 euro banknotes, was found by chance in a parking hall in Turku on 12 June.

He hid millions of euros around Turku. The police said they probably recovered all of it.

Several authorities provided assistance to police, including Finnish Defence Forces, Border Guard and Customs.

Turunen is said to have planned the crime for several months, and to even have bought an apartment in the centre of Turku specifically for the purpose of keeping Nurminen prisoner there. During the whole time, Turunen also lived a perfectly normal family life with his wife and three underage children, all of whom were oblivious to the crime.

The only apparent motive Turunen has had for the crime is simple lust for money. He has had nothing against Nurminen or her family.

Course of events

Turunen originally approached his victim in her home in Etu-Töölö by posing as a mailman having a package to deliver to her. When Nurminen opened the door, Turunen knocked her down to the floor, tied her up, and placed her inside a large wooden box he had brought with him. Turunen then brought this box with him all the way to the apartment in central Turku, where he released Nurminen from the box and left her in the apartment's specifically modified bedroom. For two weeks, Nurminen's only contact with the outside world was a television set and Turunen feeding her once per day. After the ransom was paid, Turunen brought Nurminen to a forest in Rusko, where she had to remain alone for several hours, until the police were able to locate and safely retrieve her.

References

References

  1. (2009-06-14). "$17m ransom: kidnap victim freed".
  2. [http://www.ts.fi/online/kotimaa/201901.html Juha Turunen's new name is a reminder of the events of the kidnapping] {{webarchive. link. (2011-10-07 , [[Turun Sanomat]] 4 March 2011, accessed on 25 April 2011.)
  3. [http://www.helsinkitimes.fi/htimes/domestic-news/general/6759-kidnapping-suspect-confesses-to-finnish-police.html Kidnapping suspect confesses to Finnish police]
  4. (October 2025)
  5. [http://www.intermin.fi/poliisi/helsinki/home.nsf/headlineseng/35B133C5F60593EEC22575D8005963D7?opendocument All of the ransom money has probably been recovered] {{webarchive. link. (2011-07-16 . Finnish Police)
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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