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Explained: What are the fraud accusations against the Danish People’s Party’s vice chair?

Morten Messerschmidt, the vice-chair of the Danish People's Party went on trial on Monday for forging documents and misusing EU funds when he was an MEP in Brussels. We explain what the case is about.

Explained: What are the fraud accusations against the Danish People's Party's vice chair?
Danish People's Party Vice Chair arrives at the court on Monday. Photo: Philip Davali/Ritzau Scanpix

Who is Morten Messerschmidt? 

Morten Messerschmidt is the deputy chair and so-called Crown Prince of the Danish People’s Party, long seen the most likely successor to the populist party’s co-founder and current leader Kristian Thulesen Dahl. 

What is he supposed to have done? 

When he was an MEP in 2015, Messerschmidt served as chairman of Movement for a Europe of Liberties and Democracy (Meld), a group of Eurosceptic MEPs. 

Through Meld, and its linked fund Feld, he applied for funding of 98,325 Danish kroner to hold a conference for party members at the Color Hotel in Skagen. Although the party received the money, the conference Messerschmidt had promised the EU was never held, with the party instead using the money to hold a summer meeting, with football matches and museum visits. 

Messerschmidt is also accused of forgery, as he presented a contract purporting to be between the Color Hotel and the party. The contract was signed by Jeannie Nørhave, who purported to represent the hotel but who is instead the Danish People’s Party’s administrative chief. 

What could happen if he is found guilty? 

The prosecutor has charged Messerschmidt under three different sections of the Penal Code, the first of which deals with the misuse of EU funds and has a maximum punishment of one-and-a-half years in jail. The other two, which cover forgery, come with a maximum sentence of two years in prison. 

If Messerschmidt is found guilty, and particularly if he is jailed, it will quite likely mark the end of his political career. 

It also risks damaging the Danish People’s Party’s standing in the run-up to local elections on November 16th. 

What happened on Monday? 

In court on Monday, Messerschmidt pleaded not guilty, saying that he had been so busy with his political career that he had not had time to check the applications for grants that his staff sent to Meld, and had therefore not realised that the agenda sent to Meld did not end of matching the actual conference which took place.

Brussels he said was a “paper circus”, with huge numbers of documents required to be signed off on. 

“I have never signed so many papers as I did there,” he said. “About every other month I got a folder submitted. It can be thank you letters, minutes, and everything else that needs to be signed.”

How did the supposed fraud come to light? 

Messerschmidt’s MEP colleague Rikke Karlsson left the party in 2015, citing misuse of the Meld and Feld funds.  The European Anti-Fraud Office (Olaf) then began investigating the issue, in 2019 passing the investigation over to Denmark’s State Prosecutor for Serious Economic and International Crime (Søik). The prosecutor finally charged Messerschmidt in April.

Why has it taken so long to get to court? 

Partly because of the length of time it took both Olaf and Søik to carry out their investigations.  

How long will the court case last? 

The case will be in court for seven days, with the court’s judgement and also possibly Messerschmidt’s sentence handed down on August 13th. 

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CRIME

Five residents at Denmark’s Kærshovedgård expulsion centre convicted in drugs case

Five residents of Denmark’s Kærshovedgård Departure Centre have been convicted on serious drugs charges.

Five residents at Denmark’s Kærshovedgård expulsion centre convicted in drugs case

Four men and one woman resident from Kærshovedgård were found guilty in a major drugs case at Herning District Court on Thursday.

The men were each sentenced to eight years in prison, while the woman received a five-year sentence, regional media TV Midtvest reported.

Court proceedings in the extensive case have been ongoing since January, with more court days required than initially planned.

Police used wiretaps and other methods to gather evidence in the case, according to TV Midtvest.

Central and West Jutland Police announced last summer that more than half a million kroner in cash had been seized during the arrests.

Located 13 kilometres from Ikast in Jutland, the Kærshovedgård facility is one of two deportation centres in Denmark used to house rejected male and female asylum seekers who have not agreed to voluntary return, as well as persons with so-called ‘tolerated stay’ (tålt ophold) status.

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The residents do not have permission to reside in Denmark but many cannot be forcibly deported because Denmark has no diplomatic relations or return agreements with their home countries.

Kærshovedgård houses people who have not committed crimes but have no legal right to stay in Denmark, for example due to a rejected asylum claim; as well as foreign nationals with criminal records who have served their sentences but are awaiting deportation.

It first became prominent in the mid-2010s, when it received criticism for imposing conditions that could lead to mental illnesses in residents.

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