Thirty years ago tonight, Karina Holmer headed into Boston with friends for a night out and never made it home. Originally from Sweden, Karina was living in Massachusetts and working as an au pair when she met friends in the city that evening. During the overnight hours, she became separated from the group near the Zanzibar nightclub in Boston's Theater District. A bar employee later recalled being asked to help her get a cab, but when he turned around after calling for one, she was gone.
The following day, on June 23rd, a a man searching through a dumpster in Boston's Back Bay neighborhood made a horrifying discovery, the partial remains of a woman identified as Karina. That launched an investigation that would eventually become known as Boston's coldest case. Nearly three decades later, investigators are still working to fill in the gaps of Karina's final hours. They have never identified the crime scene, and other portions of her remains have never been located.
Over the years, investigators examined numerous leads and interviewed a number of people connected to the case, including a local man known as "Superman" who was among the last people seen speaking with Karina and a Boston police officer she had been dating. No one has ever been charged. Then there's the letter. Friends later said Karina had written to a friend back home in Sweden saying, "Something terrible has happened. I cannot tell you right now what it is. But I will tell you when I get home." She never got the chance.
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