From 1956 to 1963 Glistrup was an associate professor in tax law at the
University of Copenhagen, and after leaving the university he became the owner of one of Denmark's leading law firms. On national television in 1971 on the last day for sending in tax returns, he praised tax fraudsters as the "freedom fighters of our time," and he displayed his own tax card with a tax rate of zero. His television appearance triggered mass outrage, and
Finance Minister Poul Møller made a complaint to
Danmarks Radio, stating that they should rather have presented factual information on filling out tax returns. The government proceeded to have police and tax authorities begin an investigation into Glistrup's finances. He had a unique sense of humour, the most famous example of which was his suggestion to replace the
Ministry of Defence with an answering machine saying "We Surrender" in
Russian. The investigation of Glistrup's economic conditions dragged on but resulted in 1983 in Glistrup being sentenced by the supreme court to three years in prison and a fine of
DKK 1,000,000 and the parliament finding him unfit to be a member. The case against him was complicated and involved an extensive web of companies that only transferred money to each other. The prosecuting authority described this web of companies as fiction, to which Glistrup responded that the only fiction involved was the "fiction theory" of the prosecuting authority. He was readmitted to the party in 1999 and in response the entire parliamentary group left in protest, and formed a new parliamentary group called
Freedom 2000. He died on 1 July 2008, aged 82. ==Notes==