True crime news logo
  • News

Sign up for our newsletter and get the latest stories

Never miss the latest true crime news, reviews and top lists — plus new podcasts, series, films and books.

You can unsubscribe with one click from any email.

True crime news logo

The international true crime destination. Cases, documentaries, podcasts and travel routes.

© 2026 truecrime.news. All rights reserved.

Confession exposes the justice system's failure against the vulnerable

False Confessions Expose Denmark's Justice System Flaws

How a vulnerable man came to 'confess' to 38 murders he didn't commit—and what it reveals about Nordic criminal justice

Published
May 26, 2025 at 10:00 PM

In 2011, Danish police arrested Erik Solbakke Hansen and secured a confession that would seem like every prosecutor's dream: the suspect admitted to 38 separate murders. The following year, a Copenhagen court convicted him and sentenced him to life imprisonment. The case appeared closed.

Nine years later, everything unraveled. In 2020, Denmark's Eastern High Court (Østre Landsret)—an appellate body roughly equivalent to a state supreme court in the United States—completely overturned Hansen's conviction. The court not only acquitted him of the murders but concluded he was innocent in the vast majority of the cases he had confessed to. A man had spent nearly a decade in prison based entirely on confessions he never should have made.

The Hansen case has become a cautionary tale in Scandinavian legal circles and internationally, illustrating how even modern, Western justice systems can catastrophically fail vulnerable populations. It raises uncomfortable questions about the reliability of confession evidence and the adequacy of safeguards protecting cognitively impaired or mentally fragile suspects during police interrogations.

According to case documentation, Hansen's false confessions stemmed from a convergence of factors: psychological pressure applied during police interviews, insufficient assessment of his mental state, and procedural violations in how investigators handled the case. Critically, Hansen's psychological vulnerability was not treated with the seriousness it warranted. Danish authorities failed to establish adequate protective mechanisms for mentally fragile individuals during investigation and prosecution—a gap that exposed fundamental weaknesses in the Nordic legal model often held up internationally as a standard for fairness and rehabilitation.

The mechanics of how Hansen came to confess to crimes he did not commit mirror patterns documented in false confession cases worldwide. Research into wrongful convictions in North America, Europe, and beyond has consistently shown that suspects experiencing mental health crises, cognitive impairments, or developmental disabilities are disproportionately susceptible to confessing under interrogation pressure—even when they are factually innocent. The phenomenon challenges a basic assumption underlying many justice systems: that an innocent person will simply deny guilt and remain steadfast under questioning.

In Denmark's case, the gap was especially pronounced. Police and prosecutors operated without sufficient protocols to identify and protect vulnerable individuals, and the courts did not adequately scrutinize the reliability of confessions obtained under such conditions. The system relied too heavily on Hansen's admissions as evidence while neglecting to pursue independent corroborating evidence—a fundamental inversion of proper investigative practice.

The case has triggered broader debate in Scandinavia about the evidential value of confessions and the need for reformed interrogation standards. It mirrors concerns raised in other European countries and North America where false confessions have led to high-profile exonerations. DNA exoneration projects in the United States have found that roughly 30 percent of overturned convictions involved false or coerced confessions—a statistic that should alarm any jurisdiction relying on confession evidence as a cornerstone of prosecution.

For the Danish justice system, the Hansen case represented a reckoning. It demonstrated that even countries with strong rule-of-law traditions and modern criminal procedures could systemically fail their most vulnerable citizens. The 2020 acquittal exposed what investigators, prosecutors, and judges had missed: the absence of robust checks on police interrogation practices, inadequate mental health screening before taking statements, and insufficient judicial skepticism toward confession evidence.

Today, the case functions as a cautionary reference point in discussions about interrogation reform across the Nordic region and beyond. Legal scholars and practitioners in Denmark and neighboring countries have cited Hansen's wrongful conviction as evidence supporting the need for video recording of all interrogations, mandatory psychological evaluation before custodial questioning, and enhanced legal representation for vulnerable suspects.

Erik Solbakke Hansen's exoneration came too late to restore the years lost to imprisonment, but his case may yet prevent similar tragedies. It stands as a stark reminder that confession evidence, however seemingly definitive, is only as reliable as the conditions under which it was obtained—and that justice systems everywhere must vigorously protect their most vulnerable members from their own vulnerability.

Read more

Family murder: shocking double murder revealed
Book

Danish War Veteran Held Parents' Bodies in Car for a Week

Secrets of the Police reveal PET's blind spots
Book

Inside Denmark's Cold War Terror Case: Police Expose Intelligence Service Role

Danish Murder Cases
Podcast

Danske Drabssager: Inside Denmark's Darkest Murder Cases

Related Content
Family murder: shocking double murder revealed

Danish War Veteran Held Parents' Bodies in Car for a Week

Secrets of the Police reveal PET's blind spots

Inside Denmark's Cold War Terror Case: Police Expose Intelligence Service Role

Danish Murder Cases

Danske Drabssager: Inside Denmark's Darkest Murder Cases

Unresolved digs deep into Denmark's mysterious crime cases

Denmark's Hidden Cases: New Podcast Resurrects Forgotten Crimes

Advertisement
SS

Susanne Sperling

View all stories →
Share this post: