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The “crypto” kidnapping of the 1930s must have been the one that started the Tom Hagen murders.
This is confirmed by Dagbladet from various sources with knowledge of the meetings between the two.
Independently of each other, sources describe the aforementioned meetings as much more informal than one can get through the press.
Dagbladet is today able to provide unknown information about the meetings between Hagen and the “cryptomaniac,” who were released from police custody last week.
I wanted to mine Bitcoin
The meetings, which NRK first mentioned, should have addressed the crypto currency Bitcoin.
They should have taken place during the period when the value of the digital currency soared in the climate towards the end of 2017 and the beginning of 2018.
It must have been the hijacker in his 30s who contacted one of Tom Hagen’s companies, Tom Hagen Eiendom AS, and requested a meeting to come up with a business idea.
Through his real estate company, Tom Hagen owns the Fet Business Park in Fetsund.
There, in recent times, a data center has been established that Romerikes Blad has called “one of the safest in the world”.
The “crypto man” should have foreseen that Tom Hagen Eiendom AS could invest in the recovery of the crypto currency Bitcoin. There is only a certain amount of Bitcoins in the world, and they can be mined, but to do so, it takes large amounts of computing power.
It can be bought for money, but it was money that the now-accused “cryptomaniac” of the 1930s did not have.
Therefore, you must have wanted to join Hagen and the real estate company as investors.
Met without notice
As Dagbladet understands, only two of the meetings between the “encrypted man”, Hagen, and his real estate company have been formal in nature.
This should have taken place in the real estate company’s open office landscape in the Futurum building.
It was during these meetings that the accused man in his 30s must have proposed his business idea, and it was after these meetings that Hagen and his company must have rejected the proposal.
The investments the man should have suggested should have been too large for Hagen’s taste and not fit Hagen’s long-term business philosophy. The proposed investment would have amounted to tens of millions of NOK, as Dagbladet understands.
The man then went to the Futurum building and Hagens Real Estate Company offices without notice, up to five or six times, according to information from Dagbladet.
It should have been noticed because the man was always well dressed in suits in a casual office landscape.
It should also not have been unusual for Tom Hagen’s real estate company to accept multiple actors with specific business ideas or proposals, after Dagbladet was informed.
Detained and released
The “encrypted man” was arrested by police on Thursday night last week. He was then charged with murder or complicity in the murder of Anne-Elisabeth Hagen, who disappeared from her Lørenskog home on October 31, 2018.
Police described the man in his 30s as an IT and cryptocurrency expert, and came out Friday, saying there was a “relationship” between the man and Hagen.
The man was never detained, but released on Saturday afternoon. Later, the police had dropped the murder charge against him, but charged him with kidnapping.
The man’s defender, Dag Svensson, does not want to comment on Dagbladet’s information about the meetings.
He also doesn’t want to go into what his client was asked in the interrogations, or about the meetings with Hagen and how they met each other has been a topic in the interrogations.
Svensson says the man in his 30s denies all blame.
– Look at the accusation as absurd. Although the charge has changed to a serious kidnapping, it is a very serious charge, he says.
Svensson says his client is willing to answer all police questions, but that there will be no further questioning this week.
Free, but the killing intent
Tom Hagen was also released from police custody last week after a courtroom drama.
Before the “crypto man” was arrested on Thursday night, the Eidsivating court of law decided to release murder victim Tom Hagen.
Contrary to the Lower Roman District Court, which, one week in advance, decided to detain Hagen for four weeks, the Court of Appeal found no reasonable cause to suspect that Hagen murdered his wife Anne-Elisabeth.
Police appealed to the Supreme Court, but on Friday rejected the highest court appeal in the nation and released Tom Hagen.
On Friday afternoon, Hagen was released from Oslo prison as a free but still murderous man.
Police have chosen to uphold the charge against Hagen, despite the decision of the Court of Appeal.
Allegedly killed
Anne-Elisabeth Hagen (70) disappeared from her home in Sloraveien on October 4, 2018. When her husband and billionaire Tom Hagen returned from work at 1.30 p.m., his wife was gone.
Again, there was a threatening letter with a ransom demand of nine million euros, to be paid in the Monero crypto currency.
To get in touch with the alleged counterparty, he communicated in Bitcoin payments, where a specific amount corresponded to a specific message, according to VG.
The case was long investigated as a kidnapping, but last summer the police came out and said they had changed the main hypothesis of a kidnapping with financial gain as a motive, to a finger slaughter organized as a kidnapping.
On Tuesday, April 28, police arrested Tom Hagen on his way to work.
Police believe Hagen and any aides have organized the kidnapping and carried out a “clear and planned orientation.” The garden denies the criminal charges and fully understands the charges against him.
Dagbladet has failed to obtain a comment from Hagens’ defender Svein Holden.
Do you want to argue?