
Inside Danish Justice: The Nordic True Crime Series Breaking New Ground
Station 2 gives international audiences rare access to Scandinavian crime investigations and courtroom drama
Denmark's crime rate ranks among the lowest in Europe, yet the Nordic nation has produced some of the continent's most high-profile criminal cases. Now, a Danish documentary series is bringing those investigations to international audiences with unprecedented access to the machinery of Scandinavian justice.
Station 2, available on streaming platform TV 2 Play, follows presenter Anders Lomholt into active police investigations, crime scenes, and secured forensic psychiatric facilities—access rarely granted to documentary filmmakers anywhere. The series represents a distinctly Scandinavian approach to public accountability: giving citizens transparent insight into how the state prosecutes crime.
**From Submarines to Smuggling Rings**
Among the cases featured is the internationally notorious submarine murder—the 2017 killing of British journalist Kim Wall aboard an improvised submarine built by Danish engineer Peter Madsen. The case captivated global media and resulted in a life sentence, yet Station 2 provides the investigative detail often lost in international headlines.
Beyond the headline cases, the series examines the infrastructure of Nordic crime: professional car theft rings, Eastern European organized crime networks operating across borders, and border drug smuggling operations. These investigations reveal how Scandinavian law enforcement tackles organized crime—a region historically known for relatively low violent crime but increasing transnational criminal activity.
One of the series' more controversial episodes examines "the Girl from Kundby," a case that shocked Denmark and raised international questions about terrorism prosecution of minors. The 15-year-old was charged with terrorism offenses, bringing defense attorney Mette Grith Stage into the narrative to explore the legal and ethical dimensions of prosecuting children in extremism cases.


