Henning Bremer Bødtker (14 August 1891 – 19 November 1975) was a Norwegian jurist and civil servant. He was the Attorney General of Norway from 1945 to 1962.
Personal life
He was born in Svelvik as a son of ship captain Jacob Bødtker (1847–1923) and Hilda Tofte (1853–1943).[1] He is a second cousin of professor Adam Trampe Bødtker.[2]
In 1922 he married Swedish citizen Dagmar von Sydow.[1] Their daughter who was also named Dagmar married landowner and politician Carl Oscar Collett.[3]
From 1919 he was a practising lawyer in Oslo. He worked as a secretary for the Norwegian Bar Association from 1929 to 1937, also editing Norsk Sakførerblad for the last six years. He became a board member in the Norwegian Bar Association in 1938 and chaired the organization from 1940 to 1947.[1] During the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany he was imprisoned in Møllergata 19 from 12 June 1941, then in Grini concentration camp from 12 September 1941 to 4 September 1942.[4] He had endeavored to keep the Norwegian Bar Association from being usurped by the Nazis. His organization was one of forty-three to protest nazification attempts on 15 May 1941, in a letter addressed directly to ReichskommissarJosef Terboven. This protest of the 43 was met with harsh reactions; already on 12 June 1941 arrest orders were issued on Bødtker and fellow signatory Erling Steen. On 18 June six more protesters were arrested.[5]
Post-war career
After the war he served as the Attorney General of Norway from 1945 to 1962. He chaired the committees that oversaw the transition to peacetime of Nortraship between 1945 and 1946, and then the Norwegian whaling fleet between 1946 and 1947.[1]