Blekingegade Gang

The Blekinge Street Gang
Dates of operation 1972 - 1989
Motives Financing of PFLP
Active region(s) Denmark, Sweden
Ideology Marxism, Maoism, Third-Worldism
Major actions Robbery, theft, forgery, murder
Status Disbanded in 1989.
Size 5-10
Blekingegade. Amager. 2004

The Blekinge Street Gang (Danish: Blekingegadebanden) (December 1972 to May 1989) was a group of about a dozen communist political activists who during the 1970s and 80s committed a number of highly professional robberies in Denmark and sent the money to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. The gang's claims to fame were the professionalism of their heists, and the 1989 discovery of a large cache of weapons and explosives in a hideout flat on Blekingegade ("Blekinge Street") giving the gang its press name. The gang referred to themselves as the inner core of three organizations named KAK, KUF and KA/M-KA.[1][2][3][4]

Key members

Criminal style (MO)

All crimes after 1972 were committed to provide money or weapons to PFLP. In their commission of these crimes, the gang followed some common principles.

During the preparation phase they maintained absolute secrecy; never say anything on the phone, making sure they were not followed, and didn't even tell their closest family what they were doing. Each big heist was usually preceded by months or at least weeks of detailed planning, preparations and surveillance. The surveillance/stakeouts were usually done on foot or from the back of small closed vans. When renting cars, apartments etc. they used stolen identities and false driver licenses, taking care to avoid using the stolen identities in ways that would be noticed by the victim (such as spending the victim's money). They used professional countersurveillance techniques as routine, including spotting of unmarked police cars, evasive driving, calling between payphones etc.

They concealed their identity by always using complete disguises so they could not be recognized. This included masks or theatrical makeup. They did not reveal the political affiliation or motives, viewing them as crimes with a practical goal, not public demonstrations of force or terror. During criminal activity, they never carried any papers with their real names or addresses, in order to give the other gang members time to get away before the police figured out who they arrested. They always used freshly stolen getaway vehicles equipped with previously stolen unrelated license plates.

During robberies, they used a quick in-out approach. Most crimes were completed in a matter of seconds or minutes. They were extremely brutal and scary during the crime to pacify the victims and avoid further casualties. Take the loot, getaway cars etc. themselves, without relying on the victims to do anything but flee or freeze.[4] They aimed at avoiding serious human casualties. When this rule was broken in the last robbery, the police redoubled their efforts and arrested the gang.

1963 to 1970 Open rebellion

Political activities

In June 1963, The communist parties of China and USSR fell out with each other, splitting the entire world of national communist parties into Maoist and Moscow-faithful fractions. The official Communist Party of Denmark (DKP) chose the Moscow side. That year, Gotfred Appel unofficially founded the Communist Task Force (KAK, Danish: Kommunistisk ArbejdsKreds) to influence DKP towards Marxist-Leninist-Maoist ideology, and he was expelled from DKP in September 1963. That same month, Appel founded the publishing and printing company "Futura" which took over the lucrative contract to translate and print the Danish language publications of the Chinese Embassy. This contract was formerly held by the DKP newspaper Land og Folk, with Gotfred Appel as the primary contact. Futura also became the publisher of the party newspaper Communist Briefing (Danish: Kommunistisk Orientering) and other publications of KAK. Futura's biggest commercial success would be the official Danish translation of Mao Zedong's The Little Red Book. In December 1963, Appel formally founded KAK as a new independent "party". On February 8, 1965, KAK organized the first Danish "Vietnam demonstration" against the Vietnam War,[4]:10 and founded the first Danish "Vietnam committee" on January 14, 1966.[1]:??[4]:10

Gotfred Appel's big ideological theory was published in extensive series of articles in "Communist Briefing" during 1966 and 1967. His "leech state theory" theorized that the rich countries make so much money by exploiting 3rd world countries that even their "poorest" citizens are so rich they are effectively "bribed" into being part of the Capitalist bourgeoisie and unlikely to participate in any Communist revolution until this source of wealth dries out due to liberation of the 3rd world. Accordingly, western communists who really want a communist ideal state must first help liberate the 3rd world countries from western exploitation. This theory will be the basis of all future activities in both the party and the gang. The theory is later published as a book.[10] During the fall of 1967, Jens Holger Jensen made the acquaintance of Gottfred Appel during a small one-man KAK-demonstration and almost immediately began helping out and soon joined KAK.

In September 1967, the Maoists had also left the youth wing of DKP (Communist Youth of Denmark, Danish: Danmarks Kommunistiske Ungdom (DKU)), and KAK created its own youth chapter, KUF, with its own newspaper The Young Communist (Danish: Ungkommunisten), on March 26, 1968. During 1968, the Maoists left KAK and formed the "Communist Association Marxists - Lenininsts" (KFML Danish: Kommunistisk Forbund Marxister - Leninister), later renamed to "Communist Workers Party" (KAP Danish: Kommunistisk ArbejderParti).[4]:10–11 and 60 The Chinese embassy cancelled the publishing contract with Futura on July 30, 1969, as Gotfred Appel insisted that the various "student" uprisings in the west were not the start of a new communist revolution, but merely internal strife in the bourgeoisie, from which new communists could be recruited. In contrast, the official National People's Congress had passed a resolution to the contrary. From this point on, KAK would be based solely on Marxism-Leninism and Appels theories,[4] and in the fall of 1969, "The Young Communist" dedicated an issue to Palestine in general and PFLP in particular. It publicly hailed PFLP as a revolutionary movement with the right ideology. This praise continued throughout many subsequent issues.

Criminal activities

KUF played a leading role in a violent demonstrations against the Vietnam War on April 27, 1968, and against the John Wayne movie The Green Berets on May 5, 1969. PFLP was founded in the Middle East in December 1967, with a communist agenda for post-liberation Palestine, and fathered modern terrorism by hijacking an El Al airliner in Rome on July 22, 1968. In October 1969, two KUF members were the first Westerners to train in PFLP training camps in Jordan, namely active KUF street fighters blacksmith Gert Rasmussen and toolsmith Hans "Xander" Truelsen. When PFLP wanted to train them for a specific operation, Gert got scared, fled home to Denmark, and was expelled from KUF for "unreliable and indecent behaviour". Xander also left KUF before the real gang activity began in 1972.

From June to July 1970, Jens Holger Jensen, Peter Døllner and Jørgen Poulsen were in PFLP training camps in Lebanon and Jordan. During those months Carlos the Jackal was also trained in PFLP camps in Lebanon and Jordan, but may not have met the KUF members.[1] At about the same time founders of the German RAF were also trained in Palestinian camps in the near middle east, and Oevig says they too trained in PFLP camps,[1] while the gang members says the RAF founders trained in Fatah camps in Jordan.[4]:21 Gotfred Appel and Ulla Hauton visited the PFLP in Jordan from September 1 to 22, 1970, including a visit to the site of the infamous triple Dawson's Field hijackings. They escaped the country just as the Jordan government struck back during the Black September.

While Appel and Hauton were abroad, KUF attempted arson with Molotov cocktails against the Danish "Bella Center" conference center on September 8, 1970, in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent the 1970 World Bank Summit, and spearheaded violent demonstrations against the World Bank Summit from September 20 to 25. Gotfred Appel only avoided arrest as he could prove he was in Jordan at the time. Hans 'Xander' Truelsen spent three weeks in prison.[11] On November 21, 1970, Niels Jørgensen arrested for pro-PFLP graffiti.

1970 to 1977 Liberation Support

Political activities

To avoid a repeat of the pointless violence committed by KUF while Gotfred Appel and Ulla Hauton were out of the country in September 1970, all outward actions and demonstrations were stopped in late 1970. Appel took direct control of KUF and officially told the members to spend the next several years studying Marxist-Leninist theory. Some KUF members chose not to stay on for this. It may be a cover story, as an underground criminal cell was formed at the same time (see further below).

Inspired by the Canadian Liberation Support Movement, KAK founded the charity Clothes to Africa (TTA, Danish: Tøj til Afrika) in July 1972, collecting used clothing and other used items which they cleaned up and sent to refugee camps run by like-minded 3rd world liberation movements. The first shipment was 0.9 tons shipped to the MPLA from Angola in 1972.[4]:19 They sent a further 8.7 tons to FRELIMO in Mozambique and PFLOAG in Oman in 1973,[4]:19 4.7 tons to FRELIMO in 1974,[4]:19 13.3 tons to MPLA, PFLO in Oman, and ZANU in Zimbabwe in 1975,[4]:19 9.1 tons ZANU in 1976,[4]:19 and 27.3 tons to ZANU in 1977.[4]:19

Jens Holger Jensen purchased a bungalow for Gotfred Appel and Ulla Hauton on July 25, 1976. Jens Holger Jensen took up residence in a "henhouse" on the same plot. The source of money is officially unknown. From November 1977 to May 1978, Ulla Hauton led a brutal feminist witch hunt amongst the male KAK and KUF membership, using methods such as isolating members from all their friends (who were also members), forced "self-criticism" and outright beatings.

Criminal activities

To avoid further troubles with the police, KAK/KUF was converted from a very active group of violent demonstrators to a very secret underground cell in late 1970; led by Gottfred Appel, Ulla Hauton and Jens Holger Jensen. The former top activist Hans 'Xander' Truelsen refused to participate and left the organization.[11] In July 1971, Gotfred Appel and Ulla Hauton had negotiated with PFLP-leader Wadi Haddad in Beirut, Lebanon. Between December 22, 1972 and January 10, 1973, KUF broke into a small Danish National Guard depot and stole three machine pistols, four machine guns, some armor-piercing rifles, each complete with its separately stored vital parts, ammunition, tools and other accessories. No other items (not even cash money) was taken. Some of these weapons were found in the gang hideout after their arrest in 1989.

The coordinator of all European PFLP-EO activities Michel Moukharbal was arrested in Paris on June 27, 1975, and briefly betrayed the organization, leading French police to a hideout where Carlos the Jackal was partying. Carlos killed Moukharbal and two policemen, wounding the third. Amongst Moukharbal's papers was a reference to KAK and KOUF: KUF misspelled in French. In July 1975, Jens Holger Jensen led a field trip to PFLP in Lebanon.

The gang now allegedly staged a number of coups. The gang is suspected of robbing a transport of cash to the local branch of the unemployment fund of the Unskilled Workers Union on December 9, 1975. The amount robbed was DKK 0.5 million (US$0.081 million[12]). On September 2, 1976, the gang allegedly robbed a transport of cash from a post office, which yielded DKK 0.55 million (US$0.091 million[12]). The gang allegedly used fake duplicate tax return money orders (each with a small realistic amount) and fake drivers licenses to defraud the Postal service of a total amount of DKK 1.4 million (US$0.24 million on November 8, 1976[12]). It is suspected that Jan Weimann had inside knowledge of the security codes in the brand new money order system.

Gotfred Appel, Ulla Hauton, Jens Holger Jensen, and possibly one more KAK member, negotiated with Wadi Haddad in Baghdad, Iraq in February 1977. There are two conflicting versions of these negotiations:

In 1977, Jens Holger Jensen may have staked out Palma de Mallorca Airport in preparation of the joint PFLP/RAF Landshut Hijacking. This is only according to the Gottfred Appel version of the meeting with Wadi Haddad in February 1977.[1]:261–265 On December 31, 1977, the group conducted a secret live fire training exercise in a forest, using the New Years fireworks as a cover. This was the only illegal action in which Gotfred Appel was ever proved actively involved, as he was the lookout and was stopped by Police in possession of a radio illegally tuned to the police radio frequency. From November 1977, almost all legal and illegal activities had ground to a halt due to Hauton's feminist witch hunt in KAK/KUF.

1977 to 1988 Collective Liberation Support

Political activities

A grand meeting of the KAK membership expelled Ulla Hauton on May 4, 1978, and due to his insistence, also expelled KAK founder Gotfred Appel. In the aftermath, Gotfred Appel secured the legal rights to the name KAK, and the majority changed the name to "Communist Workgroup" (KA, Danish: Kommunistisk Arbejdsgruppe or M-KA, Danish: Manifest - Kommunistisk Arbejdsgruppe), the publishing activity was renamed from "Futura" to "Manifest", and the newspaper from "Communist Briefing" to "Manifest". Where KAK had a single unchallenged leader, KA instituted a collective leadership, roughly consisting of the active gang members. In August 1978, the majority split into two groups; KA focused on continuing the interrupted legal and illegal activity, while Marxist Workgroup (MAG, Danish: Marxistisk ArbejdsGruppe) focused on analyzing the organizational failure and then dissolves itself in 1980.[4]:25 KA was formally established on September 3, 1978.[4]:26

From October to November 1979, the female doctor "Anna" volunteered in a Red Cross/PFLP refugee camp Nahr-El-Barred north of Tripoli, Lebanon. TTA had continued its activity, and shipped about 70 tons of clothes to ZANU in 1978.[4]:19 As people started to sell their used stuff instead of donating it to charities, TTA was deemed no longer profitable on November 17, 1986. TTA was closed down and the efforts were redirected to a new fund raising project: An all volunteer café named "Café Liberation".[2]:387–388 Café Liberation opened for business in April 1987,[2]:388–389 but never managed to make a profit despite everybody working for free.[2]:394

Criminal activities

PFLP Intelligence chief Marwan El-Fahoum had been assigned KA's new primary PFLP contact in May 1979. On October 9, 1979, Jens Holger Jensen and Niels Jørgensen faked a trip to the USA to go underground for a year. Six days later nameless wanted-posters for "person 1" and "person 2" were secretly circulated to Danish Police and maybe some foreign agencies. On July 7, 1980, the gang allegedly kidnapped a bank manager and his family in their own home and tried to get access to the bank vault. It failed and the family was released. The gang still denies involvement in this crime and the charges were dropped before trial.[4] During a stakeout near Aarhus, Denmark on September 15, 1980, a runaway lorry crashed head first into their stakeout van killing Jens Holger Jensen instantly, while Niels Jørgensen had briefly stepped outside the van. Niels Jørgensen pretended he was never there and later presented himself as next of kin to take possession of various items from the scene. Peter Døllner was arrested on March 19, 1981, for using a fake drivers license in an assumed name to collect the proceeds from selling another stakeout van. The punishment was just a fine.

In July 1981, all of KA's members visited PFLP in Lebanon. From 1982 to 1984, Bo Weimann began compiling a file of potential Mossad operatives in Denmark. The file happened to include a lot of Jews, but the group later insisted that listing or killing Jews in general was never the goal, just figuring out which ones were actively fighting for Mossad in a manner similar to KA's own relationship with the PFLP. At trial this is ruled espionage. On April 2, 1982, the gang allegedly robbed postal workers carrying cash to a bank, yielding DKK 0.786 million (US$0.096 million[12]) in cash and DKK 72 million in worthless checks. The gang allegedly robbed an armored Bank van on March 2, 1983, robbing DKK 8.3 million (US$0.96 million[12]). No individual gang member was found guilty in this.[4]:40 Two Palestinian PFLP-members were arrested in Paris with DKK 6 million in suspicious cash on March 26, 1983. The investigation was bungled.

The gang had broken into a Swedish army depot on November 9, 1982, stealing a large amount of heavy weaponry (mostly Swedish brands), including bazookas, anti-personnel mines, plastic explosives and boxes of ammunition; all with complete accessories etc.[2]:122–123 In February 1983, the gang allegedly staked out several Swedish police stations as potential targets for stealing light weaponry.[2]:123–128 The plan was dropped because they did not believe there were enough guns in each police station to justify the risk.[2]:128–129 In September 1983, the group made an alleged stakeout of a Norwegian army depot in the hope of repeating the success from the Swedish depot.[2]:129–133 The plans were dropped because transporting the previously obtained Swedish weapons to the PFLP on the West Bank had turned out to be too difficult.[2]:133–134 From 1984 to 1988, small consignments of stolen weapons were carefully packaged and literally buried in various forests near Vienna, Zürich and Paris for later pickup by PFLP or its allies.[2]:135–137 On September 3, 1986, a police informant led French police to one of the buried consignments of weapons near Paris. It was not discovered who buried the weapons, only that PFLP was the intended recipient.[2]:137–138

With funding and practical assistance from PFLP, the gang planned and prepared between 1982 and 1985 to kidnap Jörn Rausing (a son of industrialist Gad Rausing) from his home in Sweden, intending to demand a US$25 million ransom. The plan failed seconds before the grab on January 7, 1985 apparently because the original stakeout got the hinges on his front door wrong. PFLP pressured the gang to try again, but the stress from the long high-stakes preparations made the gang fall apart and the kidnap was not retried.[2]:246–306

On September 27, 1985, the gang moved its hideout from its old address to a new apartment on Blekinge Street in Copenhagen. The new hideout apartment was rented in the name of a fictitious computer club, and all documents were signed in the name of a stolen identity, while the bills in were paid in cash to avoid alerting the real person by that name.[2]:310–311 On December 3, 1985, the gang robbed a money transport from a post office,[2]:307–310 yielding DKK 1.5 million (US$0.16 million[12]) in cash and DKK 68 million in cancelled checks.[2]:308 No individual gang member was found guilty in this.[4]:40 Niels Jørgensen was arrested during an attempted car theft on June 3, 1986. To avoid arousing any suspicion by the gang, the police pretended to believe his cover story and the charges were silently reduced to a fine.[2]:350–365 On Monday December 22, 1986, the gang stole the Christmas weekend takings of Danish clothing mega store "Danish: Daells Varehus", as those takings were being picked up by a bank courier.[2]:371–380 During the escape from the mega store, they fought off several shop employees, including the security chief (a former elite soldier) who sustained a fractured skull from pistol-beating.[2]:371–372 For their next robbery the gang therefore developed a new soft baton designed not to cause skull fractures. The robbery yielded about DKK 4.7 million (US$0.63 million[12]) in cash.[2]:374,376 No individual gang member was found guilty in this.[4]:40 The gang's last robbery came on November 3, 1988 at 05:13:40 am. A postal transport of money and valuables was robbed as it arrived at the old central postal office, carrying DKK 9.3 million (US$1.4 million[12]) in cash and bearer bonds plus about DKK 5 million in other valuables. As the gang left with their takings, the Police arrived earlier than anticipated.[2]:430–461 In the ensuing shootout, a rookie police officer was killed by buckshot from the sawnoff shotgun used during the robbery.[2]:451–461 This enraged the police so badly, that they decided to actually share information between the secret police and the robbery squad.

1989 to 1995 Arrest and Punishment

On April 13, 1989, the police arrested Peter Døllner, Torkil Lauesen, Jan Weimann, Niels Jørgensen and Niels Jørgensen's ex-wife.[1]:11–26 However, a search of their homes and workplaces did not provide any useful evidence except for some identical sets of keys. The police realised the keys were for the gang's secret hideout, but did not know the address.[1]:417,425–426,428–429 Between April 13 and May 2, 1989, Carsten Nielsen became scared and slightly paranoid due to the arrests, realizing he was next. However he managed to remove or destroy some of the evidence from the hideout in Blekinge Street, while staying with friends and family, constantly on the move.[2]:28–52

On May 2, 1989, Carsten Nielsen accidentally drove his car, which was rented in his brother's name, into a lamppost. He was disfigured and blinded by the crash and was picked up by traffic police, who sent him to hospital and searched the car. Amongst the items in the car was a utility bill for the hideout in Blekinge Street. Carsten Nielsen was arrested in his hospital bed.[2]:9–21 Later that day, the police searched the hideout in Blekinge Street and discovered plenty of evidence awaiting destruction as well as a massive cache of weaponry not yet shipped to the PFLP.[2]:53–72 The sensational find of so much weaponry in a residential building prompted the press to give the gang its nickname "The Blekinge Street Gang".[2]:71

The trial lasted from September 3, 1990 to May 2, 1991, before a verdict was reached.[2]:479–497,503–510 Due to the statute of limitations, all crimes before ca. 1980 and some later crimes were not included in the charges.[2]:496 Due to the inability to prove which gang member pulled the trigger or at least proving that the gang had planned to use deadly force, no person was convicted for the death of the young police officer, and this part of the case remained open. Some of the specific charges resulted in "not guilty" verdicts. On November 8, 1991, the sentences were confirmed by the supreme court on appeal.[2]:510 Marc Rudin was separately convicted for his role in the last robbery in October 1993.[2]:510–511 On December 13, 1995, the remaining gang members still in prison were released on parole (good behavior + 2/3 of the sentence served).[2]:512,523 Marc Rudin was released from prison in February 1997.

Details of the old Main Post Office robbery

The target of this robbery was the daily transport of cash from local retail bank branches to the banking HQs in Copenhagen. The cash was transported by the national postal service as detailed below, and the gang targeted the only stretch in which the total amount would be transported by car before being divided up for distribution to the individual bank HQs. Planning and stakeouts for the robbery began more than one year before the heist, in the fall of 1987.[2]:394

The mail delivery

Monday, October 31, 1988 was payday for a lot of people, who began early Christmas shopping on the next day. On the evening of Tuesday, as on all days, shops all over the country deposited the days takings in dropboxes at their local retail bank branches. In the morning of Wednesday, November 2, 1988, bank branches counted the deposits and credited them to the shop's accounts.[13] In the afternoon, bank branches carried their excess cash to the local post offices and mailed it as insured high-value mail.[2]:395 The same service was used by a few other businesses sending valuable goods such as bearer bonds and expensive office equipment. In the evening, local post offices presorted the mail by destination post office as indicated by the zip code.[13] Most of the bank cash would be going to the Copenhagen post office.[2]:395

On Wednesday November 2, 1988 at 22:00, the gang members Torkild Lauesen, Jan Weimann, Niels Jørgensen, Carsten Nielsen, and Marc Rudin met at the hideout in Blekingegade and put the plan in motion.[2]:439 At night, postal trains picked up the day's mail (most post offices are conveniently at the train stations) and dropped them off at the destination post offices.[13] The gang stole four or five cars and parked them at strategic locations. An orange Toyota HiAce wan was parked in Løvstræde across from the back gate of the post office.[2]:439–442

On Thursday, November 3, 1988, at 04:25, postal trains delivered a lot of mail at the postal rail terminal between Copenhagen central station and Copenhagen police headquarters.[2]:400 At 04:50, money and other high-value mail was loaded from the trains to a yellow armored postal wan, call sign 8886 K5B, with the driver "JF" and the guard "FA".[2]:445 The van had a direct radio link to police HQ,[2]:406,445 but the gang thought the radio link was to the postal HQ who would then have to phone the police before the police could respond to any robbery.[4] At 05:00, 8886 left the postal terminal bound for the old main post office in Købmagergade, hence code K5.[2]:445 At estimated 05:02, 8886 passed and greated the alfa-south police patrol car near Tivoli.[2]:445–446

In the post office yard

At estimated 05:03, 8886 passed town hall square, where Carsten Nielsen spotted it and signalled the rest of the gang via their radios.[2]:443,446 Carsten Nielsen then jumped on a bicycle and pedalled to the orange van.[2]:443 At the same time, the gang put a blue "police" light on the stolen Ford Escort and drove to the post office.[2]:443–444 Marc Rudin and "member Y" were disguised as fake uniformed policemen, while Torkil Lauesen and "member X" were disguised as fake detectives. X and Y are Niels Jørgensen and Jan Weimann, but only the gang knows which is which.[2]:442–443 At estimated 05:06, the fake detectives and policemen arrived at the post office back gate in Løvstræde. The fake detectives started questioning the gatekeeper if he might have seen the perpetrators of a (made up) nearby assault, while the fake policemen pretended to search the yard.[2]:444–445

At the same time, 8886 slowed down to a crawl as it turned down Niels Hemmingsens Gade. An early plan was to use a fake bicycle accident to attack 8886 here, but this was abandoned as being too risky.[2]:400–406 At 05:07, 8886 drove into the yard behind the old post office, the gatekeeper closed the gate, and JF reported safe arrival to the radio dispatcher.[2]:446 At estimated 05:07, FA got out of 8886 and rang the bell for the postal workers to pick up the cargo.[2]:446 At estimated 05:10, FA and two postal workers unloaded the mail to a cage on wheels on the loading ramp.[2]:446

At 05:13:40, the fake uniformed policemen broke their cover and attacked FA on the ramp. JF called in the robbery to the radio dispatcher. The gang estimated a police response time from this point of two minutes from this point and (literally) started their countdown clock.[2]:447,453 At 05:14:00, the police dispatcher sent out the alarm requesting that any patrols in the area respond to the robbery.[2]:453 At 05:14, patrol car 0-11 with officer KB and his new rookie partner Jesper Egtved Hansen passed the Church of the Holy Ghost.[2]:454–455 Alfa-south and 0-11 responded to the alarm call and both drove towards the post office.[2]:453 At the same time, one fake policeman pushed over the cage with a loud bang. JF reported this bang as a gunshot to the radio dispatcher, so from this point on the police thought the gang had started shooting, but the gang knew they had not. Torkil Lauesen and X knocked down the gatekeeper, Torkil Lauesen opened the gate, and Carsten Nielsen backed the orange van into the yard. X did crowd control with the sawn off shotgun, while the other fake policeman stopped FA at gunpoint.[2]:447–450 The fake policemen loaded the loot into the orange van, and Torkil Lauesen joined them.[2]:450

Escape and the killing

At 05:15:19, the gang finished loading the loot into the orange van and jumped in the back. X jumped into the front seat and they drove out the gate with 21 seconds to spare (according to their countdown watch), but alfa-south had already reached Løvstræde[2]:450–451 and 0-11 was getting in position around the corner to the left.[2]:460 At 05:15, one of the policemen from alfa-south fired twice at the orange van. One bullet hit a storefront, while the other bullet went through the back window, barely missed the gang members in the back, ricocheted off the side and lodged itself into the drivers seat cussion about an inch short of Carsten Nielsen's back.[2]:451,454 The orange van turned sharp right down Købmagergade and stopped abrubtly. X jumped out and fired the shotgun in the general direction of 0-11.

A buckshot pellet hit officer Jesper Egtved Hansen in the head, killing him.[2]:451–452 There are three interpretations of this event:

At 05:15, the orange van turned left down Klareboderne and got away.[2]:454 At 05:15:50, officer KB reported "officer down" to the radio dispatcher.[2]:461 At estimated 05:17, the orange van drove into an underground carpark in Klerkegade, where the gang transferred to two other getaway cars with the loot.[2]:430–431 At 05:20, the head of the Police robbery squad got the call from the radio dispatcher.[2]:461 At 07:00, the operations chief of police intelligence (Danish: Politiets Efterretningstjeneste) Per Larsen heard of the robbery and immediately suspected the gang.[2]:467 At 08:15, the gang met up in Blekingegade with the loot, dispersed and resumed their normal daily duties to avoid suspicion.[2]:468 At 08:57, police intelligence units commenced 24/7 surveillance of the known gang members, which continued until their arrest.[2]:468

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Peter Øvig Knudsen, Blekingegadebanden 1: Den danske celle, Gyldendal 2007, ISBN 978-87-02-04369-3 (in Danish)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 Peter Øvig Knudsen, Blekingegadebanden 2: Den hårde kerne, Gyldendal 2007, ISBN 978-87-02-05906-9 (in Danish). The timeline on pages 516 to 523 was especially useful
  3. Jørgen Moos as told to Jeppe Facious and Anders Peter Mathiasen, Blekingegadebetjenten, Peoples's Press 2007, ISBN 978-87-7055-186-1 (Police memoirs in Danish)
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Niels Jørgensen, Torkil Lauesen and Jan Weimann: Danish: Det Handler om Politik (It is About Politics) in Social Kritik Issue 117, Volume 21, March 2009, ISSN 0904-3535, pp 4-61, includes four pages of references.
  5. ekstrabladet.dk: Frontmand for Blekingegadebanden er død, unconfirmed tabloid news report, retrieved September 12, 2008 at 03:12 (in Danish)
  6. His surname used to be spelled Weimann but he reverted to the older spelling Weymann after the Danish Name Act was reformed in 2006. dr.dk: Weymann var stemmen i Øvigs bøger, local news story from March 17, 2009, retrieved August 5, 2009 (sidebar)
  7. dr.dk: Weymann var stemmen i Øvigs bøger, local news story from March 17, 2009, retrieved August 5, 2009
  8. http://tankaromib.wordpress.com/2011/06/07/var-allt-i-ebbe-carlsson-rapporten-blaha-blaha-om-svt-kobras-carlos-schakalen-dokumentar-och-en-tidningsanka-fran-1988/
  9. http://www.aftonbladet.se/nyheter/article10944532.ab
  10. Gotfred Appel: Perspektiver for socialismen i Danmark, Futura 1967 or 1968
  11. 1 2 Anders Riis-Hansen, Kenneth Kainz (2009-09-13). Blekingegadebanden, the movie (Based on the Øvig books), TV-version part 1 of 2 (Television production). DR (Danish national tv). External link in |title= (help)
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 U.S. Federal Reserve: Historic exchange rates before 1989, retrieved on May 22, 2008
  13. 1 2 3 Common knowledge in Denmark at the time.

External links

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