A Utah jury has convicted Kouri Richins, 35, of aggravated murder in the death of her husband Eric, who died from fentanyl intoxication on March 4, 2022. Prosecutors alleged Richins purchased illicit fentanyl and mixed it into her husband's drink while their three young sons slept, in what investigators describe as Utah's first fentanyl poisoning murder case.
A Danish forensic investigator has built a career seeking answers in post-mortem examination, drawing on a childhood marked by fear to fuel his work in criminal investigation. His approach to solving cases through forensic science represents an unconventional path into one of Denmark's most demanding investigative fields.
An Oslo court has denied release for Marius Borg Høiby, the 29-year-old stepson of Norway's Crown Prince Haakon, who is standing trial on 38 criminal offenses including four rape charges. The judge cited significant risk of reoffending as grounds for continued detention.
Joseph DeAngelo, responsible for at least 13 murders across California, evaded law enforcement for four decades until crime scene DNA matched his relatives through GEDmatch in 2018. His guilty plea in 2020 closed one of America's most elusive serial killer cases.
A Danish man has been sentenced to seven and a half years in prison for orchestrating a recruitment scheme that targeted first-time offenders from inside a prison cell. The case exposes vulnerabilities in Nordic criminal justice systems where organized drug networks strategically use incarcerated operatives to build distributed supply chains.
A 27-year-old Danish man was sentenced to five years in prison in March 2026 for sexually abusing 14 underage boys—yet committed additional assaults on at least two more children up until his court appearance. The case highlights critical failures in monitoring and preventing recidivist child abusers across Scandinavia.
An AI agent achieved a 77% detection rate for software vulnerabilities in a controlled competition featured in the International AI Safety Report 2026, placing it among the world's most advanced defensive security systems and outperforming the majority of human competitors.
A major U.S. cybersecurity firm has unveiled technology designed to detect and block AI agents from stealing data during routine internet sessions. The development signals that automated, AI-driven theft is no longer theoretical—it's an active criminal threat affecting organizations worldwide, including Scandinavian institutions.
A 2026 research documentation from Denmark reveals that autonomous AI systems are freezing bank accounts and blocking digital services without human approval or review. The discovery raises urgent questions about accountability, due process, and who bears responsibility when algorithms make irreversible financial decisions.