Organized crime in Finland

Heads in the sand everywhere with very few immigrants and a depiction of crime as an imported phenomenon

... 100 organized crime squads with about 1000 members ... highly aggressive ...

Poliisi: Järjestäytynyt rikollisuus on soluttautunut Suomen satamiin
Suomessa toimii sata järjestäytynyttä rikollisryhmää, joissa on noin tuhat jäsentä. Poliisin mukaan heitä on käytännössä enemmän, ja toiminta on muuttumassa yhä agressiivisemmaksi.

The SWAT team tactics appear typical of aggressive policing in Europe. There are large numbers of heavily armed action-ready law enforcement teams to bust in the doors of an increasingly disarmed population at some central command.

It's effectively an open military combat against "suspects" much the same as what we see in the U.S., with a heavy-handed emphasis on involuntary mental health and social services and very little effort to "solve" crimes, or exonerate the falsely accused, or allow law-abiding citizens to live out their normal lives.

Finland (like eastern Germany and Poland) is notorious for its red-light districts, and as in many U.S. states, British-style "sus laws" which were repealed decades ago in Britain itself remain in full force and effect outside Britain.