
A new Danish true crime podcast is pulling back the curtain on how Scandinavian police solve murders—by broadcasting the interrogations themselves.
'Forhøret' ('The Interrogation'), hosted by Stine Bolther and streaming on the Nordic subscription platform Podimo, dissects police interview recordings from Denmark's most significant homicide cases. The series represents a distinctly Scandinavian approach to true crime storytelling, emphasizing investigative methodology and forensic rigor over sensationalism.
The podcast examines high-profile cases including those against Peter Madsen and serial offender James Schmidt, two names that have dominated Danish criminal headlines. Rather than dramatizing crimes, 'Forhøret' focuses on the strategic techniques detectives employed during crucial questioning—how they established timelines, addressed inconsistencies, and built evidentiary foundations.
For international true crime audiences, the series offers insight into how Nordic criminal justice systems operate. Denmark, like other Scandinavian nations, follows a civil law tradition distinct from common law countries like the US and UK. Danish police interrogations are conducted under specific legal protocols that differ significantly from Anglo-American practices, making this podcast valuable for comparative criminology.
Each episode combines several analytical layers. Listeners hear portions of actual police interviews, then receive context from forensic pathologists, criminal investigators, and legal experts who dissect what transpired during questioning. This framework allows audiences to understand both the immediate tactical decisions investigators made and the broader investigative strategy.
Forensic medicine features prominently in the series' analysis. Episodes explore autopsy findings and pathological evidence that either corroborated or contradicted suspects' statements during interrogation. This integration of medical-legal science with interview technique is particularly relevant given Denmark's reputation for rigorous forensic standards within European law enforcement.
The podcast's longitudinal approach—following cases from initial investigation through trial and conviction—demonstrates how interrogation evidence ultimately functions within Denmark's judicial system. This chronological structure reveals how police work documented in interviews translates into prosecutorial strategy and courtroom outcomes.


