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Danish Murder Cases — episode S13E10 — Anders Brandt Lundager and the case of the police murderer

Denmark's Deadliest Police Ambush: The 1965 Amager Murders

A new podcast explores how four officers were gunned down in a single traffic stop—and what it meant for Nordic policing

Host
Susanne Sperling
Published
March 17, 2026 at 02:00 PM

On a September evening in 1965, what began as a routine traffic stop on Copenhagen's Amager peninsula ended in the deaths of four police officers—a tragedy that would reshape Danish law enforcement and remain one of the most significant killings of officers in Nordic history.

Now, a new podcast series *Danske Drabssager* (Danish Murder Cases) is bringing international attention to this largely overlooked chapter in Scandinavian true crime. The episode, titled "POLITIMORDEREN—historiske sager" (The Police Killer—Historical Cases), features police historian Anders Brandt Lundager and Frederik Strand, director of Denmark's Police Museum, unpacking what happened that night and why it mattered.

**The Evening of September 18, 1965**

The victims were young: officers Aksel Dybdahl Andersen and Elmer Gert Jeppesen, both 23; Gert Søndergård Harkjær, 24; and Henning Skov Hansen, 28. They were patrolling Copenhagen when they stopped a white Simca Versailles near Kastrup Fort in Amager. Inside were two men fleeing a burglary.

One was Palle Mogens Fogde Sørensen, a career criminal with a 9mm FN pistol in a shoulder holster. When officers approached, he opened fire. Twelve bullets struck the first patrol. Two officers died instantly; returning to fire a coup de grâce into a survivor, Sørensen then encountered a second police car. Both officers in that vehicle were killed.

Fifteen shots were fired in total. All four officers lay dead. His accomplice, Normann Lee Bune, fled on foot. Sørensen surrendered three days later and confessed immediately.

**A Watershed Moment for Scandinavia**

While officer-involved deaths occur in most democracies, the killing of four police in a single incident was unprecedented in Danish history—and remained one of the deadliest single attacks on uniformed police in the Nordic region. The psychological and institutional impact was profound.

The murdered officers received a state funeral attended by King Frederik IX, underscoring the case's national significance. The trial, concluding on March 18, 1966, resulted in a life sentence for Sørensen—but the real aftermath was structural. Danish police would later revise protocols for traffic stops, officer training, and armed response procedures, changes that rippled across Scandinavian law enforcement.

**Why This Matters Now**

The podcast's timing reflects a broader international interest in how democracies examine their policing histories. Unlike high-profile U.S. cases such as the 1966 University of Texas shooting or similar European incidents, the Amager murders have remained largely confined to Danish and Scandinavian discourse. English-language true crime audiences have had little exposure to how Nordic nations processed such violence.

Lundager, a historian with a master's degree from Copenhagen University, brings academic rigor to a narrative that blends criminal investigation, courtroom drama, and institutional reform. Strand's role as director of the Police Museum—a unique institution documenting Scandinavian law enforcement history—grounds the discussion in archival evidence and historical context unavailable in most true crime storytelling.

**The Perpetrator's Legacy**

Palle Mogens Fogde Sørensen died in prison on February 1, 2018, at age 90, having served over 50 years. His case was never revisited for parole, and he remains a symbol of the dangers that escalated weapons training was meant to address. The broader question—how a career criminal with prior convictions managed to carry a loaded pistol and evade law enforcement long enough to commit mass murder—reflected gaps in 1960s European criminal databases and interstate coordination.

**Access and Relevance**

The podcast is available through major platforms including Apple Podcasts and Danish Radio Play, though English subtitles or transcripts are not currently listed. For international true crime audiences and historians tracking European police reform, the episode represents a rare deep dive into a case that shaped Nordic law enforcement but remains obscure outside Scandinavia—a gap this documentary aims to address.

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