Belgium

Mystery of what actually happens to British man in 1937 remains mystery even after 85 years

The mystery of what has actually happened to the British man Max Victor Wenner on a winter’s day in 1937 over the skies of Belgium remains a mystery even after the 85 years.
Wenner has been visiting his fiancee in Cologne (Germany) and was flying back to Haren, then the site of Brussels Airport, when for some reason he fell out of the aircraft, his body being recovered in woods between Genk and Zutendaal in the Belgian province of Limburg. The case has remained a mystery till now.
Wenner was a wealthy industrialists with having a German roots based in Manchester, England. The plane was carrying him from Cologne to Haren, where he was expected to take a connecting flight to England. However, his journey ended in the woods at Terboekt, between Genk and Zutendaal.
Wenner was found to be missing when the plane landed at Haren, suggesting none of the ten passengers onboard had noticed he was gone.
After some days, his body was traced in the woods in Zutendaal. As per reports, he was well dressed, down to his shoes, lying on his back at the foot of pine tree, based on testimonies from people who were aware of the find at the time.
The incident made news in the local area, with papers reporting a medical examiner had officially reported the dead man had suffered no bodily injuries but had died from suffocation, presumably during his fall — a conclusion that seems unlikely following such a fall.
Investigators now looking into the case explained that the science of the time was less exhaustive than it is now. DNA was virtually unheard of in police circles at the time, and unusual death wasn’t always considered a possible criminal act.
Case files from those days are not archived, especially when no suspect was identified, and there no one witnessed exactly what happened to Wenner.
Not only were there few passengers on board at the fatal moment, but conditions on the plane would reportedly have made it difficult for other passengers to detect anything suspicious.
Gabriel Peters

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