Night shooting on Frederiksberg

Shots hit Frederiksberg apartment, residents inside, Copenhagen tests line between threat and gang routine

Nordic Observer · June 3, 2026 at 03:07
  • Berlingske reports that several shots were fired through the window of a ground-floor apartment on Frederiksberg.
  • Residents were inside the apartment when the shots were fired, but no injuries were reported.
  • The case raises questions about whether residential buildings in Copenhagen are increasingly being used as stages for intimidation shootings.
  • Police now face the immediate question of whether the apartment, a resident, or the address itself was the intended target.

Several shots were fired through the window of a ground-floor apartment on Frederiksberg in Copenhagen while residents were inside, and no one was hit. Berlingske reports that the shooting struck a stuelejlighed — a street-level flat — with people present in the home when the shots came through the glass.

The detail that matters is the setting. A ground-floor apartment sits directly in the line between street and private life: visible from the pavement, easy to identify, and exposed in a way upper-floor homes are not. When shots are fired into that kind of address and nobody is hit, police still have to answer the same questions as in a more lethal case: whether a specific resident was being warned, whether the wrong apartment was chosen, and whether the shooter expected the occupants to be inside. A window facing the street is not a random target in a dense residential district.

Frederiksberg is its own municipality inside the Copenhagen urban area, wealthier and more orderly than many of the districts usually associated with gang shootings. That is part of why incidents like this travel beyond the police blotter. If firearms are being used to send messages at ordinary apartment blocks there, the geography of intimidation is widening beyond the places where residents have long been told such violence belongs. The cost is carried first by the people in the flat, then by the neighbours who hear shots in a courtyard or on a residential street and discover that the distinction between gang territory and ordinary housing is thinner than advertised.

Danish police have spent years trying to suppress the cycle seen elsewhere in the Nordics, where threats, retaliatory shootings and attacks on homes harden into a routine. A shooting through a window without injuries still fits that sequence: public enough to be noticed, controlled enough to avoid a body, direct enough to reach the intended audience. Whether this case belongs to that pattern depends on what investigators establish about the address and the residents, but the method already says something. Someone chose a home, a window and an hour when people were inside.

For Copenhagen residents, the immediate measure is simple: an apartment block on Frederiksberg became a shooting scene without anyone needing to enter the building. The glass was enough.

Källor: Berlingske