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The two agreed to speak after Tom Hagen came to work, NRK reported.
The last call she received was from a family member who was not her husband at 09.14. Then Hagen had just arrived at work.
For the next several hours, her phone stayed on at the single-family home in Sloraveien when calls came, but no one answered.
Neither text messages nor calls to his phone were answered, NRK is informed by sources close to the family.
Lost calls
NRK has spoken to several people who describe Tom Hagen as a person with very regular routines.
One of the routines should be that he returned home from work at age 17, but the day of the disappearance he returned home several hours earlier than usual.
Police previously said they believe Anne-Elisabeth Hagen was alive at 09.14 on October 31, 2018, and that this is the last sure sign of life.
The reason is a phone call he had with a family member other than Tom Hagen. 34 minutes later she was called by an electrician who, among other things, was going to install a new lamp in the house.
This phone call was not answered, nor did the electrician call again.
In the hours after police believe it to be the last certificate of safe life, Tom Hagen and other family members should have attempted to contact Anne-Elisabeth, NRK reported.
NRK is aware that the missed calls have been the subject of a police investigation into the case. The garden, which was at work, called several times without grabbing her.
– He was getting more and more in a hurry and wondering if something had happened to him, so he left home earlier than usual, one in the Hagen circle tells NRK.
After the NRK was informed, Tom and Anne-Elisabeth Hagen agreed to call after their arrival at the workplace, to clarify what needed to be done.
Another family member must have tried to get hold of her. Also, text messages sent to Anne-Elisabeth went unanswered.
Tom Hagen and the other family member also called and were concerned that something had happened to Anne-Elisabeth at her home in Sloraveien, NRK reported.
Contacted the police
NRK has asked the police several questions related to the communication between Anne-Elisabeth Hagen and Tom Hagen on the day of the disappearance, and whether this differs or varies from the usual communication between the married couple.
“For the sake of the investigation and the danger of loss, we cannot comment on these questions in more detail,” Prosecutor Haris Hrenovica told NRK.
Police previously confirmed that Hagen returned to Sloraveien at 1:30 p.m. on the day of the disappearance.
When Hagen arrived at the house, Anne-Elisabeth had disappeared, and a threatening letter demanding payment in cryptocurrency was left in an envelope.
About half an hour later, Tom Hagen called the police, and it was agreed that they would meet at a service station in Lørenskog.
This was the beginning of one of the most extensive investigations in Norwegian history.
Reject criminal charges
On April 28 of this year, Tom Hagen was arrested and charged with murder or complicity in the murder of Anne-Elisabeth Hagen. On May 7, a man in his 30s was arrested and charged with the case.
The man was charged with murder or complicity in the murder, but two days later, the accusation was changed to complicity in custody.
Shortly after the arrest, police confirmed that the man had a relationship with Hagen and that he had IT and cryptocurrency experience.
Both Hagen and the 30-year-old defendant deny criminal charges in the case. Prosecutor Haris Hrenovica told NRK that the police did not want to comment on the case.
On Thursday it was announced that the police will continue to search Hagen’s home. Police have said it is necessary to carry out investigations into the house, as it is most likely the scene of the murder of Anne-Elisabeth Hagen.