Denmark movie theaters close out of respect for mall shooting victims

A shoe was abandoned in front of the shopping centre Fields, closed for at least a week after Sunday shooting, as police is investigating the crime scene the day after, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Monday, July 4, 2022. Danish police believe a shopping mall shooting that left three people dead and four others seriously wounded was not terror-related. They said Monday that the gunman acted alone and appears to have selected his victims at random. (Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix via AP)
A shoe sits abandoned in front of the Fields shopping center in Copenhagen, where a gunman killed three people Sunday. (Mads Claus Rasmussen / Ritzau Scanpix)

Denmark's largest cinema chain kept all its movie theaters closed Tuesday because a 17-year-old employee was one of the three people killed in a weekend shooting attack at a shopping mall.

Nordisk Film Biografer, which has 23 theaters nationwide, said on Facebook that the company made the decision out of respect for the victims — the teenage boy it employed, a 17-year-old girl and a 47-year-old Russian man — and "to talk the situation through with our staff.”

One of the chain's locations is at the Field's shopping center, on the outskirts of the Danish capital, where Sunday's mass shooting took place.

Four other people were hospitalized in critical but stable condition after suffering gunshot wounds. Authorities have said that a 22-year-old Danish man now in custody had apparently selected people to shoot at random.

In all, about two dozen people were hurt, most in the panicked stampede after the shooting started out at the mall. Neither the gunman nor the victims can be named under a court order.

A memorial service for the victims is planned for Tuesday night. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Copenhagen Mayor Sophie H. Andersen are expected to attend.

Authorities have said the suspect acted alone, and they have ruled out terrorism as a motive. On Monday, the suspect was ordered held for 24 days in a secure mental health facility on preliminary charges of murder and attempted murder.

Stine Rysgaard, a spokeswoman for the shopping mall, said the multistory retail center with more than 130 shops would remain closed until at least Monday. She said the mall had proper security but declined to give details, citing the ongoing investigation.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.