
Teri Hatcher was extremely excited about any scandal that involves Sex and Bicycles…
Sex, lies and bicycles: Espionage scandal rocks Denmark
The head of the Danish intelligence services allegedly provided false information to political leaders in the Kingdom of Denmark to justify placing the director of military intelligence under surveillance for nearly a year.
Lars Findsen, former head of the Danish Defense Intelligence Service, during his trial in Lyngby, October 21, 2025.Exchange Rate €1 EUR = $1.15 USD
The verdict was delivered on November 5 at the Lyngby court, north of Copenhagen. The court ordered the Danish state to pay 20,000 kroner (€2,700) to the former head of Denmark’s military intelligence service (Forsvarets Efterretningstjeneste, FE), Lars Findsen, as compensation for the violation of his privacy. During a meeting at the Ministry of Justice on January 25, 2022, the head of the intelligence services (Politiets Efterretningstjeneste, PET), Finn Borch Andersen, disclosed details of Findsen’s private life in front of the Social Democratic justice minister Nick Haekkerup and leaders of six Danish political parties.
Only one participant at this meeting agreed to testify at the highly publicized trial held in Lyngby on October 22 and 23. Morten Messerschmidt, president of the far-right Danish People’s Party (Dansk Folkeparti), stated that during this briefing, he learned that Findsen “had a sex life in which he stole expensive bicycles from train stations, which he brought to a holiday home in northern Denmark where he exchanged them for sadomasochistic sexual services provided by his girlfriend.”
According to the court, it was justified to bring this information to the attention of political leaders insofar as it could have exposed the head of the FE to potential blackmail. But that presupposed that the information was true – and nothing could substantiate the claims. As a result, the judges concluded that “the information [provided] to party leaders [was] false and therefore illegal and offensive.”
Fit for a TV series
As surprising as the trial may seem, it was only the latest twist in a scandal with international ramifications that continued to shake the Danish intelligence community. Fit for a TV series, the saga began on August 21, 2020. On that day, the Danish intelligence oversight agency published a press release. It revealed that a whistleblower had contacted the agency in 2019, and that it had since discovered the FE had concealed “essential and crucial information.” Even more seriously, the agency raised concerns that Danish citizens may have been spied on by the military intelligence leadership.
The announcement sent shockwaves through Denmark – especially since immediately afterward, Defense Minister Trine Bramsen suspended several FE officials, including Findsen, the country’s “chief spy,” who had spent five years leading the PET and seven years at the Ministry of Defense before taking the helm of military intelligence in 2015.
In the following weeks, information began to leak to the press. Reports emerged of an agreement between Copenhagen and Washington that allowed the US National Security Agency (NSA) to access Danish undersea telecommunications cable tapping systems. It would later be revealed that the NSA used this access to spy on prominent European political figures in 2012 and 2014.
But, in autumn 2020, Danish intelligence services were most concerned with discovering who was leaking information to the media. Placed under surveillance by the PET, Findsen found himself at the heart of what the press called “the largest and most expensive surveillance operation in history.” On December 8, 2021, returning from a business trip to North Macedonia, he was apprehended as he arrived at Copenhagen airport by plainclothes special forces agents. Three other FE employees were detained the same day, but released in the following weeks.
Findsen was accused of leaking highly confidential information to associates and journalists and held in custody at Hillerod prison. His identity remained secret until a hearing at the Copenhagen court on January 10, 2022, where he finally appeared. He was eventually released on February 17, 2022.

71 days in detention
Meanwhile, on December 13, 2021, a commission established to investigate the FE’s practices cleared all the officials suspended in August 2020. Yet, the head of military intelligence remained under suspicion of treason. He was not alone: On December 20, 2021, former defense minister Claus Hjort Frederiksen, who served from 2016 to 2019, was also accused of leaking state secrets after he had more or less admitted to the existence of the intelligence-sharing agreement between Denmark and the United States.
On September 16, 2022, both men were formally charged. The prosecution requested the trial be held behind closed doors for national security reasons. Both defendants appealed. On October 27, 2023, the Supreme Court decided on a partially closed trial, ruling that “the existence of the cable partnership must now be considered public knowledge,” publicly confirming the case for the first time. The court also allowed Findsen to take a copy of his indictment home, even though it was classified “secret.” This was a step too far for the prosecution, which decided to drop all charges against him and Claus Hjort Frederiksen on November 1, 2023.
Since then, the former FE chief, now an active public speaker, has recounted his 71 days in cell 18 of Hillerod prison in a book, Spionchefen: Erindringer fra celle 18 (“The Chief of the Secret Services, Memories from Cell 18,” not translated), published in October 2022. On May 6, 2025, he reached a severance agreement, ending his contract as director general of the FE in exchange for a payout exceeding €930,000.
But the scandal is far from over. The public prosecutor has appealed the Lyngby court’s ruling. Several political leaders are demanding the resignation of the PET chief at the center of the affair, Finn Borch Andersen, who maintains that his January 2022 briefing at the justice ministry was “fair, relevant and proportionate.” Meanwhile, Findsen is still seeking to understand why he was placed under surveillance and followed from autumn 2020 onward. As for the government, it appears eager to close the case as swiftly as possible, avoiding further disclosures about the agreement with the Americans.
That said,
Teri Hatcher decide to create her own scandal with Sex and Bicycles…

Teri Hatcher’s Sex and Bicycles Scandal



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