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Danish Murder Cases — episode S12E21 — The Snitch Murder
Podcast
•
March 17, 2026 at 12:42 PM

Denmark's Hidden War Crime: 400 Resistance Executions

New podcast examines the moral cost of occupation-era vigilante justice in Scandinavia

Host
Susanne Sperling
Redaktør
Danish Murder Cases
RadioPlay

When Nazi Germany occupied Denmark in 1940, the Nazi administration initially allowed the Danish government to function with relative autonomy—a strategy that made the occupation unique in occupied Europe. But by 1943, that fragile arrangement had shattered. As German control weakened and the resistance movement strengthened, a darker chapter of the occupation emerged: the systematic execution of suspected collaborators by Danish partisan groups, carried out entirely outside any legal framework.

The numbers are stark. Approximately 400 Danes were killed by resistance fighters between 1940 and 1945, with killings accelerating dramatically as the war neared its end. In 1943, only 12 people were executed. By 1944, that figure had jumped to 140. In 1945 alone—as liberation approached and German authority collapsed—238 people were killed. The surge reflected both increased partisan activity and the chaos of occupation's final months.

But the most disturbing statistic emerged only in historical retrospect: just 13% of those executed were actual informants who had genuinely betrayed Danes to the Nazis. The remaining 87%—roughly 350 people—were killed on other grounds: mistaken identity, unverified suspicion, personal vendettas, or political eliminationism dressed in patriotic language.

This historical reckoning is the subject of a Danish podcast series now drawing international attention to a case that has received limited coverage outside Scandinavia. 'Danske Drabssager' (Danish Murder Cases), hosted by Stine Bolther, examines specific executions with journalistic rigor, tracing the gap between resistance ideology and actual practice. The podcast documents organized kidnappings, failed hit operations that killed innocent bystanders instead of intended targets, and revenge killings that bore little relation to any legitimate security need.

December 1944 emerged as a particularly violent period. In Copenhagen and Aarhus, waves of street executions, ambushes, and coordinated killings created a climate of terror that mirrored Nazi reprisals—but now administered by Danes against Danes. The Holger Danske resistance group was among the most active perpetrators, operating with what the podcast describes as systematic methodology, though often based on faulty or fabricated intelligence.

The Danish case raises questions that extend beyond Nordic history. Occupied nations across Europe confronted similar dilemmas: how do resistance movements maintain moral legitimacy while fighting an illegal war? Do the methods matter if the cause is just? And what happens to a society when vigilante justice—however motivated by patriotism—replaces the rule of law?

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Retssystem
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Unlike the legal reckoning that followed WWII in Germany, Austria, and Italy, Denmark's resistance executions remained largely unexamined by formal justice. A handful of cases were prosecuted in the immediate postwar years, but most perpetrators escaped accountability. This contributed to decades of silence around the killings, preserved only in family memories and archived documents.

For international observers, the Danish case offers a counternarrative to the resistance mythology that has dominated postwar European historiography. Partisans in Greece, Yugoslavia, Italy, France, and Poland all conducted extrajudicial killings during occupation—some on an even larger scale. Yet few occupied nations have produced systematic investigations into the moral and human costs of those actions.

The podcast's significance lies not in condemning the resistance—German occupation was a genuine catastrophe that required violent opposition. Rather, it documents the corrosive effect of occupation on democratic norms, even among those fighting to restore them. When 350 innocent people can be killed in the name of security, and their names largely forgotten, it suggests that occupation warfare degrades everyone involved.

As European societies grapple with historical accountability for wartime conduct, Denmark's willingness to examine its own resistance movement offers a model: honest, granular investigation into how ordinary citizens behaved under extraordinary pressure, without either romanticizing resistance or demonizing those who fought the occupation.

Read more

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Mørkeland — episode 288 — The Missing Boy from 1953
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The 1953 Disappearance That Haunts Denmark

Danish Murder Cases — episode 168 — When Women Kill Part 3
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Danish Podcast Examines Women Who Kill

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Susanne Sperling

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