Denmark Dissolves Bandidos MC in Historic Organized Crime Ruling
Court finds motorcycle club engaged in systematic violence and murder as standard practice

Sagsdetaljer
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
In a landmark decision, Denmark's Helsingør District Court has ordered the complete dissolution of Bandidos Motorcycle Club Denmark, concluding that the organization is fundamentally criminal in nature and operates in violation of the Danish Constitution.
The judgment, handed down on October 29, 2025, represents one of Europe's most aggressive legal moves against motorcycle club culture. The court found that Bandidos MC engaged in extensive and serious criminality—including murder, violence, and drug trafficking—as standard operating procedure rather than isolated incidents.
**A Prolonged Legal Battle**
The case began in May 2024, when Danish prosecutors filed a preliminary administrative ban against the organization. What followed was an extraordinary legal process: 38 court days and more than 30 hearings before the court issued its ruling. This extended timeline reflects the complexity of proving that an entire organization—not merely individual members—shares a criminal purpose.
Danish law permits the dissolution of associations under Constitutional Paragraph 78 if they are deemed to have an unlawful aim. This provision, rarely invoked, gives courts the power to dismantle organizations at their foundation rather than prosecuting individual members alone.
**The Organization's Structure and Reach**
Bandidos MC operated across Denmark with approximately 150 members organized into roughly 10 chapters, with particular strength in Copenhagen and other major cities. Despite presenting itself as a loose federation of independent motorcycle clubs, the court determined the organization functioned as a single, unified criminal enterprise with centralized command and shared criminal objectives.

.webp&w=3840&q=75)
