Ex-rocker: Why I declined cop

As a 16-year-old, Martin was Celosse-Andersen, a part of the biker. In his own words it was the poor upbringing and lack of role models who drew him the way. Fo

Ann McDonald
Ann McDonald
12 November 2019 Tuesday 17:00
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Ex-rocker: Why I declined cop

As a 16-year-old, Martin was Celosse-Andersen, a part of the biker. In his own words it was the poor upbringing and lack of role models who drew him the way. For the first time in his life he experienced that an adult man took care of him and was his role model.

It was the beginning of 12 years in the biker before he in 2013 decided it was time to put his life on the. The desire to be a dad and be a good role model did that, he decided to leave the biker.

Subsequently, he was in the police national exit programme, which first sent him to a psychiatric prison in Nykøbing Sjælland. When he was released, police would immediately have the information out of him.

- When I will be released and hitting the parking lot, I get a message (from a police officer, ed.), where it says, 'well, what do you have for me?', tell Martin when he visits Ekstra tv studio.

Through his chaotic upbringing has Martin Celosse-Andersen experienced a part. On the picture you see he, along with the stepfather, who shot themselves in the eyes of him. Photo: Private

But he chose not to share its early experiences with the police officer.

- The best start to my new life would not be, to make me even to the sticks and get people convicted on the strip in the environment, he says.

He has, however, understanding that a police officer took hold of him after release. He did his work, as Martin formulates it.

After 12 years in the environment - some of them as a senior member - he has in his own words a show understanding of what would provoke people.

- I do what I can, not intentionally to take people across the toes. There is someone who drops in and tells everything that can be exciting, speculate he and acknowledges that the choice was indeed taken with an eye for safety.

In the clip tells Martin Celosse-Andersen about an assassination attempt with a car bomb on him in 2014. A episode no one has taken responsibility for. Producer: Lasse Brøndal

That's why he takes precautions when he is talking with the press, to lecture and, in general, about his past.

- There I am always aware of not to mention grouping by name and not to tell who was a part of it. So I keep everything to myself. It is, I think, is why they are not interested in what I'm doing.

- What would happen if you talked about what groups you belonged to, and what you did?

- I will not be able to say it.

- It would probably not end well, you hear you little say.

- Yes, I could not say. If I did, it would be an indication that I know how the people in the environment thinking.

Just the fact of, he is not talking loudly about it, get Simon Iversen, who is in the studio to break into.

- You say the former, that you are now free of the biker, but you are still living under the censorship. How free are you, really?, he asks Martin.

- of course It is a dilemma. If you are still thinking you about how you say things, are you really free? It is true, says Martin Celosse-Andersen.

- do you Feel free?

- Yes, I do. I feel that I am completely free and has got an insane opportunity to build the me of living the life I want.

Below you can hear the entire broadcast, where Martin Celosse-Andersen and Simon Iversen tells about their past as, respectively, the rocker and dependent on drugs. They talk about their upbringing and about how they both have come out of environments. Today, they keep the lectures for young people, where they share their experiences.

Updated: 12.11.2019 17:00