When Bikers Went to War: How Scandinavia's Bloodiest Gang Conflict Changed Danish Law
The Great Nordic Biker War between Hells Angels and Bandidos sparked a legislative crackdown that reshaped how Europe fights organized crime
Sagsdetaljer
Quick Facts
Klassifikation:
MC-krig der skabte dansk bandlovgivning
Quick Facts
In the spring of 1996, Denmark descended into a state of unprecedented criminal violence. What began as a territorial dispute between two motorcycle clubs—Hells Angels and Bandidos—over narcotics distribution escalated into open warfare that would fundamentally reshape how European authorities approach organized biker crime.
The Great Nordic Biker War, known locally as Den Store Nordiske Rockerkrig, started in early 1994 and raged across Scandinavia and Finland until autumn 1997. The stakes were clear: control over the lucrative hashish market in Scandinavia. By the time the fighting subsided, nine biker gang members lay dead and 74 attempted murders had been recorded—but the true impact would be felt in legislatures and police departments across the continent.
Denmark became the epicenter of the violence. On March 10, 1996, coordinated Hells Angels attacks on Bandidos members at Copenhagen Airport's parking lot left Bandidos member Uffe Lindenskov Larsen dead, with three others critically wounded. Over 30 shots rang out in broad daylight. Weeks later, on May 7, a Hells Angels member lost half of one leg in an explosion in the Brønshøj neighborhood—three Bandidos members would eventually be convicted for the bombing.
But the conflict reached new levels of brazenness in April 1996. Bandidos members launched an anti-tank rocket at Hells Angels' South clubhouse. Just four hours later, another anti-tank rocket struck the Hells Angels' Ålborg clubhouse. The escalation was staggering: in early May, Hells Angels members allegedly attempted to murder a Bandidos prisoner at Horserød prison using a hand grenade thrown into his cell.
The assault that finally galvanized the Danish state came on October 6, 1996. Bandidos launched a major coordinated attack on the Hells Angels' Vikingefesten gathering at Titangade—a deliberate strike at the heart of the rival club's operations and membership. The brazen attack on what was essentially a public event shocked authorities and the public alike.


