
About This Episode
Denmark's reputation for low crime and efficient governance masks deeper institutional problems—and one podcast set out to expose them.
Politiradio, a Danish true crime podcast distributed via iHeart and KrimiNyt, distinguished itself in the Nordic true crime landscape by stepping beyond surface-level crime reporting. Rather than relying on court documents and police statements alone, the series incorporated direct testimonies from individuals with lived experience in Danish criminal networks, offering listeners access to perspectives typically absent from mainstream media coverage.
The podcast ran for over 180 episodes through 2019, establishing itself as a significant voice in an emerging Scandinavian true crime boom. While the Nordic countries have cultivated global reputations as models of progressive criminal justice—with lower recidivism rates and rehabilitation-focused prisons compared to the United States and much of Europe—Politiradio's approach suggested a more complicated reality beneath that veneer.
The show's core focus centred on gang criminality and what Danish hosts called the "shadow sides" of Denmark's legal system. This framing matters internationally: gang violence in Denmark, particularly in Copenhagen and other urban centres, has intensified in recent years, marked by increasingly brutal turf wars and the use of military-grade weapons. Yet English-language coverage of Danish organized crime remains sparse, leaving international audiences with incomplete understanding of how Scandinavian justice systems actually manage these challenges.