Grundlovsforhør (English: Constitutional interrogation) is a legal procedure within the Kingdom of Denmark consisting of Denmark, Greenland, and the Faroe Islands where the Police of Denmark have authority to detain a person suspected of a crime for up to 24 hours. Within 24 hours, the person must be sat before a constitutional interrogation if the police wish to maintain the detention. This rule is guaranteed in the Danish constitution and exists to protect citizens from arbitrary imprisonment. It was first introduced in the Denmark's first Constitution of 1849, and has been preserved largely unchanged through all subsequent revisions of the constitution.[1]
At a constitutional interrogation, the defendant is brought before a judge, who must decide on the police's detention request. The constitutional interrogation can end in one of four ways:
This procedure is secured in section 71, subsection 3 of the current version of the Constitution of Denmark. (Official English translation)Original Danish: