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CRIME

What to do if you are victim of a Christmas burglary in Denmark?

Despite falling numbers in recent years, Denmark still sees a spike in homes being broken into around Christmas time.

What to do if you are victim of a Christmas burglary in Denmark?
File photo: Erik Refner/Ritzau Scanpix

Last year, the National Police (Rigspolitiet) reported 744 break-ins from December 20th up to and including December 27th, in comparison with 815 in 2017.

Since 2008, the overall number of burglaries at private homes has fallen by 34 percent, according to police figures.

Stats from more recent years include thefts resultant from perpetrators getting into homes using confidence tricks, so the percentage actually under-represents the fall in break-ins.

But break-ins can still be reduced and prevented further, police say.

“Thieves typically chooses to steal easy-to-move-on items such as jewellery and electronics. They need to get rid of the items quickly so that they are not in possession of them for long,” Allan Holm of the National Police Crime Prevention Centre (Nationalt Forebyggelsescenter) said in a press release.

“So if you receive a good offer on cheap goods, either from someone you know or via online marketplaces, consider whether it could be stolen goods,” Holm said.

Police advice in such situations includes:

  • Ask sellers to see the original receipt for the item
  • Pay via (onine payment app) Mobile Pay so that sellers can be traced
  • If you purchase a bicycle, check whether the bicycle’s frame number is registered as stolen in the police online system. This can be done via police app Politi.
  • If buying goods online, ensure the seller is approved using validation that requires NemID, Denmark’s system for secure login to online services.

READ ALSO: Denmark's NemID secure login system to be superseded

Measures such as the above help reduce the market for stolen goods and thereby the incentive to break in to homes, police say.

Meanwhile, the following steps should be followed if the worst happens and you return home after Christmas to find yourself the victim of a break-in.

  • Call non-emergency police number 114 to report the crime. Have your personal registration number, name, address and telephone number ready to provide to police.
  • Check your home to find out what is missing. Note down the missing items immediately to make it easier to remember. You can always add to the list if you notice additional missing things.
  • Cancel any missing debit or credit cards immediately.
  • Change or recode all locks and keys which may have been taken, including for cars and bicycles.
  • Wait until police arrive before tidying or cleaning, so that any traces or evidence – often difficult to spot – are left undisturbed.
  • Register the break-in with your insurance company and speak to them and others about how to make sure your property is secured again, as well as about measures to help prevent break-ins in future.

READ ALSO: Hundreds of Danish homes broken into at Christmas

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CRIME

Danish government backs removing children from gang-connected families

Denmark’s government wants authorities to be able to move children out of families in which parents are gang members and is likely to formalise the measure in parliament.

Danish government backs removing children from gang-connected families

The justice spokesperson with senior coalition partner the Social Democrats, Bjørn Brandenborg, told regional media TV2 Fyn that he wants authorities to have the power to remove children from their families in certain circumstances where the parents are gang members.

Brandenborg’s comments came on Monday, after Odense Municipality said it had spent 226 million kroner since 2009 on social services for eight specific families with gang connections.

“There is simply a need for us to give the authorities full backing and power to forcibly remove children early so we break the food chain and the children don’t become part of gang circles,” he said.

The measure will be voted on in parliament “within a few weeks”, he said.

An earlier agreement on anti-gang crime measures, which was announced by the government last November, includes provisions for measures of this nature, Brandenborg later confirmed to newswire Ritzau.

“Information [confirming] that close family members of a child or young person have been convicted for gang crime must be included as a significant and element in the municipality’s assessment” of whether an intervention is justified, the agreement states according to Ritzau.

The relevant part of November’s political agreement is expected to be voted on in parliament this month.

READ ALSO: Denmark cracks down on gang crime with extensive new agreement

Last year, Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard told political media Altinget that family relations to a gang member could be a parameter used by authorities when assessing whether a child should be forcibly removed from parents.

In the May 2023 interview, Hummelgaard called the measure a “hard and far-reaching measure”.

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