Norwegian Contract Killer Sentenced in Copenhagen Gang Violence Case
Failed murder-for-hire plot exposes Scandinavia's encrypted criminal networks

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Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Dag-Ørjan Slåen, a 36-year-old from Norway, was sentenced to 13 years in prison by Copenhagen City Court (Københavns Byret) in February 2026 for two attempted murders carried out as a contract killer in Denmark's capital. The case exposes how organized crime networks across Scandinavia increasingly exploit hired operatives to execute violence tied to gang conflicts, often with minimal knowledge of their principals' identities or motives.
Slåen accepted the assignments through encrypted digital services after being offered compensation reportedly worth over 600,000 Swedish kronor (approximately €50,000). He testified that financial desperation drove his decision to accept the contracts, and that he never learned who hired him or why the targets were selected. This anonymization—a hallmark of modern criminal networks operating across Nordic borders—has left law enforcement unable to identify or apprehend the unknown individuals who orchestrated the attacks.
**The Kiosk Attack and the Jammed Revolver**
On September 22, 2025, Slåen arrived at Kiosk Bien on Guldstjernevej in Copenhagen's Nordvest quarter, a working-class neighborhood northwest of the city center. Shortly before 4 PM, he attempted to shoot a pre-identified target. The attack failed when his revolver jammed—a mechanical failure that prevented him from completing the assignment. Whether the malfunction resulted from Slåen's unfamiliarity with the weapon or pure circumstance remains unclear, but the misfire inadvertently saved his intended victim's life.
**The Amager Shooting and Permanent Paralysis**


