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Anders Behring Breivik, Norway Mass Killer, Claims 'Self Defense' As Trial Begins

Posted: 04/15/2012 12:08 pm Updated: 04/17/2012 1:06 pm

Anders Behring Breivik
This Monday Feb. 6, 2012, file photo shows Anders Behring Breivik, a right-wing extremist who confessed to a bombing and mass shooting that killed 77 people on July 22, 2011, arriving for a detention hearing at a court in Oslo, Norway. (AP Photo/Lise Aserud, Scanpix Norway)

By KARL RITTER, Associated Press

OSLO, Norway -- Anders Behring Breivik shed tears as he went on trial Monday for killing 77 people - but not for his victims. The emotional display came when prosecutors showed his anti-Muslim video.

Dressed in a dark suit and sporting a thin beard, the right-wing fanatic defended the July 22 massacre as an act of "self-defense" in his professed civil war, and sat stone-faced as prosecutors described how he killed each of his victims.

But he was gripped by emotion when they showed a video warning of a Muslim takeover of Europe and laden with crusader imagery that he posted on YouTube before the attacks. Suddenly, the self-styled "resistance" fighter's eyes welled up. He cringed his face and wiped away tears with trembling hands.

"Nobody believes that he cried out of pity for the victims," said Mette Yvonne Larsen, a lawyer representing survivors and victim's families in the court proceedings.

Breivik showed no signs of remorse on the first day of a trial that is expected to last 10 weeks. After being uncuffed, he extended his right arm in a clenched-fist salute. He refused to stand when the judges entered the room.

"I don't recognize Norwegian courts because you get your mandate from the Norwegian political parties who support multiculturalism," Breivik said the first time he addressed the court.

The 33-year-old Norwegian also announced he doesn't recognize the authority of Judge Wenche Elisabeth Arntzen because he said she is friends with the sister of former Norwegian Prime Minister and Labor Party leader Gro Harlem Brundtland.

Eight people were killed in Breivik's bombing of Oslo's government district and 69 were slain in his shooting massacre at the left-leaning Labor Party's youth camp on Utoya island outside the capital.

Breivik has said the attacks were necessary to protect Norway from being taken over by Muslims and that he deliberately targeted the governing Labor Party, which he claims has betrayed Norway with liberal immigration policies.

"I admit to the acts, but not criminal guilt," he told the court, insisting he had acted in self-defense.

While Norway has a legal principle of preventive self-defense, that doesn't apply to Breivik's case, said Jarl Borgvin Doerre, a legal expert who has written a book on the concept. "It is obvious that it has nothing to do with preventive self-defense," Doerre told The Associated Press.

The key issue to be resolved during the trial is Breivik's mental state, which will decide whether he is sent to prison or into psychiatric care. Anxious to prove he is not insane, Breivik will call right-wing extremists and radical Islamists to testify during the trial, to show that others also share his view of clashing civilizations.

One mental examination found him legally insane, while another said he wasn't sick enough to be committed to psychiatric care instead of prison. If deemed mentally competent, Breivik would face a maximum prison sentence of 21 years or an alternate custody arrangement under which the sentence is prolonged for as long as an inmate is deemed a danger to society.

Breivik did not appear to have any family or supporters in court. His parents, who are divorced, did not attend the hearing. His father, Jens Breivik, answered when The Associated Press called his home in France on Monday.

"I don't want to comment on anything," he said before hanging up.

Anne Marita Milde, a psychology professor at the University of Bergen, said Breivik's tears during the video show he's not completely "flattened" emotionally - even though they didn't come when you might have expected them.

"He may in many areas be emotionally flattened, that he doesn't display emotion and so on, but it's not all or nothing here - there are facets within behavior," she said.

Utoya survivor Bjorn Magnus Jacobsen told reporters he was perplexed by Breivik's reaction.

"It might be that he is crying because of pride or because he thinks the video is so brilliant," said Jacobsen. "But it might also be he feels that he's lost his battle, but I don't really know that."

The tears came during a portion of the video that glorified armed resistance against Islam in Europe. Asked what prompted Breivik's emotions, defense lawyer Geir Lippestad said they stemmed from his conviction that he had to carry out the attacks "because he wants to save Europe from an ongoing war."

After a lunch break, Breivik was again expressionless as he watched prosecutors present surveillance footage of the Oslo explosion. The blast ripped through the high-rise building that housed government headquarters, blowing out windows and filling surrounding streets with smoke and debris.

He didn't flinch as prosecutors played a three-minute recording of a young woman's frantic phone call to police from Utoya.

"I'm pretty sure that there are many injured," Renate Taarnes, 22, said with panic in her voice as more than a dozen shots in close succession could be heard.

"Are you still there?" the police officer asked.

"Yes," she whispered. She fell silent, breathing into the phone as more shots cracked in the background.

Taarnes escaped the massacre unharmed and is scheduled to testify later in the trial.

Many survivors and families of victims are worried that Breivik will use the trial to promote his extremist political ideology. In a manifesto he published online before the attacks, Breivik wrote that "patriotic resistance fighters" should use trials "as a platform to further our cause."

Norway's NRK television was broadcasting parts of the trial live but was not allowed to show Breivik's testimony.

Breivik wants to be judged as a sane person and will call radical Islamists, and extremists on the right and left to testify to support "his perception that there is a war going on in Europe," Lippestad told the court. Lippestad said Breivik wants to read a new document he's written at the start of his testimony on Tuesday.

After he surrendered, Breivik had told investigators he is a resistance fighter in a far-right militant group modeled after the Knights Templar - a Christian order that fought during the crusades. Police, however, have found no trace of any organization and say he acted alone.

"In our opinion, such a network does not exist," prosecutor Svein Holden told the court on Monday.

In his manifesto, Breivik described the supposed group's initiation rites, oaths and the "clenched fist salute" that he used in court, symbolizing "strength, honor and defiance against the Marxist tyrants of Europe."

After blowing up parts of the government building and shooting dozens to death on Utoya island, Breivik surrendered to police 1 hour and 20 minutes after he arrived on Utoya. The police response to his terror spree was slowed by a series of mishaps, including the lack of an operating police helicopter and the breakdown of an overloaded boat carrying a commando team to the island.

Breivik called police twice, saying he wanted to turn himself in. In one of the calls, played in court Monday, he identified himself as a commander of "the Norwegian resistance movement" and said he had "just completed an operation on behalf of Knights Templar."

When the operator asked him to repeat himself, Breivik sounded irritated and hung up.

___

Associated Press writers Bjoern H. Amland and Julia Gronnevet in Oslo and Thomas Adamson in Paris contributed to this report.

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Anders Behring Breivik, a right-wing extremist who confessed to a bombing and mass shooting that killed 77 people on July 22, 2011, arrives for a detention hearing at a court in Oslo, Norway, Monday, Feb. 6, 2012. (AP Photo/Heiko Junge, Scanpix Norway)
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By KARL RITTER, Associated Press OSLO, Norway -- Anders Behring Breivik shed tears as he went on trial Monday for killing 77 people - but not for his victims. The emotional display came when prosec...
By KARL RITTER, Associated Press OSLO, Norway -- Anders Behring Breivik shed tears as he went on trial Monday for killing 77 people - but not for his victims. The emotional display came when prosec...
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10:19 PM on 05/10/2012
You know, it is a shame when a country like Norway let's their children be taught to become hate mongers by the Palestinians and provide a camp to boot, for these Hezbollah to brainwash their young people. That is so disgusting and immoral.
PATOISJAM
reason: strategize: succeed
11:41 AM on 04/18/2012
Just open the fist.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
americanalien
Veteran Commenter
01:20 AM on 04/18/2012
I hope Norway has the death penalty. This case is begging for it.
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04:11 AM on 04/18/2012
Of course it doesn't.
The USA is the only country in the industrialised western world that does.
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01:19 AM on 04/18/2012
Put him to death now have police take him out shoot him in head, plant a gun in his hand have someone shoot a few times say he shot AT POLICE HE IS A BASTARD KILLED KIDS HE SHOULD OF BEEN KILLED BY COPS MONTHS AGO KILL HIM TODAY NOW.
05:09 PM on 04/18/2012
Put him in a hoodie and have him walk through a gated community in Florida....too soon?
10:23 PM on 05/10/2012
Why all the HATE and ugly remarks...Hezbollah should have stayed away from these young people and Norway should have been more alert to what was going on at that camp.
10:29 PM on 04/17/2012
Why is he still alive?
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
04:53 PM on 04/17/2012
It is too bad that Norway prides itself on being so civilized.  Six hundred years back, as depicted by Nobel Laureate Sigrid Undsett, when Norway was thinly populated and often at the mercy of the Swedes, Danes, bubonic plague and the Christian warlords such as St. Olav, this stinking Nazi coward would now be trying to smirk without a nose, lips, or ears.
10:26 PM on 05/10/2012
It is to bad Norway was not more aware of Hezbollah in their mist, teaching their young people to hate the Israelis
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Omega2012
03:18 PM on 04/17/2012
Keep an eye out for any fascists, neo-Nazi or White Power sympathizers in your community and call the FBI.
......“If you see something, say something”
05:10 PM on 04/18/2012
...and black power sympathizers, and Communists (Allen West is on it!), and people in general.....yeah...just stupid people in general.
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darkmark
religion, the veil of evil.
02:00 PM on 04/17/2012
norway certainly doesn't come off as an evil marxist center of conspiracy. more like a very laid back small town spread out over a whole country. denmark just crawled out of voting in the"danish people's party" after ten years and putting in a center left coalition. so the scandinavian community is having identity problems. here is where it goes when a right wing government is voted into power: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=IpeiNso-Lqw that was 2009. guess what? it could happen here. the danes are generally thought of as nice people. maybe breivik got some of his enthusiasm from youtube videos like this one.
05:18 PM on 04/18/2012
And Scandinavian countries are having these problems because they haven't historically been very diverse. A few of them don't appreciate immigrants changing what their country has meant for quite some time.

Keep in mind, they have a somewhat functioning socialist country which is a rarity. The right-wingers have watched multi-culturalism fail in Britain and France, and the left is too afraid to actually do anything other than ignore them.

The only POSSIBLE good that can come of this would be a reinstatement of the death penalty.

Your video is misleading, btw. Have you ever dealt with German or Danish police? They don't mess around, they club first and ask questions later. If you're suspected of drunk driving, you're required to give blood.
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darkmark
religion, the veil of evil.
08:08 PM on 04/18/2012
the only video i've seen. as to the death penalty how could this case bringing it back, it won't, be a good thing? they don't seem to have needed that age old eye for an eye vehicle of revenge. i've always thought of it as a state fear inducer controlling the people. its sort of a tricky idea. if the state uses it to create fear that's one aspect the other is to keep most of the people ready with the quick response of "let's hang him boyz." not let's have a trial and see why this thing happened and who really is responsible. in this case who is responsible seems rather obvious. but its important for the citizens of norway to know anders is severely confused, that he has real mental problems and not just some, i can't even think what would cause a person to do what he has done without being mentally deranged. and he has done just that. he will never again see this side of a prison, 21 year maximum yadayadayada warden, he ain't comin out agian.
10:28 PM on 05/10/2012
Norway needs to become more aware of Hezbollah teaching their young people to hate Israelis
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D W Smith
Obama/Biden 2012
01:58 PM on 04/17/2012
he's just a good little NAZI, like we have, here
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MeatShield
04:44 PM on 04/17/2012
True, true. "Breivik would face a maximum prison sentence of 21 years or an alternate custody arrangement under which the sentence is prolonged for as long as an inmate is deemed a danger to society" He certainly sounds a danger to society!
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D W Smith
Obama/Biden 2012
05:57 PM on 04/17/2012
somehow, I don't think he's going going to change, either
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sacmom3
ENOUGH! Remember the children of Sandy Hook
01:00 PM on 04/17/2012
Even with all the evil and creepy ish going on in the world. This guy is really scary.
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Capn Scott
the 'moderated' me
05:54 PM on 04/17/2012
Ha! This guy is like (at least), 60% of Rush Limbaugh's listeners. That should be the "scary" thing :)
05:21 PM on 04/18/2012
No. Not really. I suppose you only hear the excerpts of Limbaugh's shows when someone is outraged about him. The man talks for 3 hours at a time, 5 days a week, and he's very passionate. He's bound to say dumb things, but he's not really any worse than comedians like Maher, or those of you who call everyone you don't agree with Nazis and fascists.
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nypapajoe
10:16 AM on 04/17/2012
A waste to humanity! 20 plus years of feeding this monster and providing him with other needs! Execute him!
12:46 PM on 04/17/2012
There is no death penalty in Europe.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
04:56 PM on 04/17/2012
And that is why most European countries maintain helicopters.  Along with providing free food and lodging, Internet access, and a prison cell that beggars many college (and all monastic) dormitories, some countries provide scum, like Breivik  the opportunity to use the wings that their lord provided them--over the North Sea.
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
04:28 PM on 04/17/2012
Keep him in solitary and darkness for the rest of his life. Allow him to talk with no one, other than his guard for one sentence per day. Prohibit reading matter, the Internet, radio, and television. Let him sit and stare into the darkness for 23 hours per day. The other hour will be meals, a shower, and exercise during the hours of darkness each day.
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mamahappy
not free, until we all are
10:13 AM on 04/17/2012
Only an insane person could murder that many people.
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Jill from NYC
Kiss my microbio.
04:15 PM on 04/17/2012
Or an evil one.
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
04:29 PM on 04/17/2012
I'm not sure that Pol Pot, Stalin, or Hitler was insane.
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mamahappy
not free, until we all are
11:25 AM on 04/18/2012
I believe if any person could commit this crime and not feel bad about it they must be insane.
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mikey09
Living off the grid.
09:57 AM on 04/17/2012
Preventive self-defense....wow...norway has 'stand your ground laws'. Is the nra international now...sorry couldn't resist....fact is this guy will be found guilty and serve his 21 yrs, and then blend into obscurity. over there they often change the names of the people released so the stygma doesn't follow them
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Fourcents
All for One and One for All
01:38 PM on 04/17/2012
You have a clear grasp of the facts! Hats off, LOL

Perhaps more of US should live OFF the GRID. Nature and the environmnet is the enemy of many, most, conservatives. Thus they deny any responsibility for either. Some even claim they are God's gifts and indestructable.

Wow.....off the grid is a lot tougher than some appreciate.
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
04:30 PM on 04/17/2012
Will he really only serve twenty-one years for killing seventy-seven people? That seems bizarre.
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03:53 AM on 04/18/2012
Probably not. It's the maximum sentence, but it can be extended indefinitely if he is still deemed a danger to society -- which is very likely what will happen.
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PhotoTronTheDaddyPhantom
Proud to be an American of African Descent
09:14 AM on 04/17/2012
Sometimes life can be the worst punishment. I think execution only brings closure to the general public, it rarely comforts the families that lost loved ones. Some of us know this from experience. This man's life was cursed the minute he pulled the trigger, let him live and face the demons that shall haunt him into the grave and beyond.
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Fourcents
All for One and One for All
01:43 PM on 04/17/2012
Your wise and rare. Just look at all the blood thirsty get even conservatives posting to express their sadism, LOL Killers love to kill killers, LOL

This guy was clearly unhinged. Far from clear to me that 15 to 21 years will change his attitude. Norway must have provisions for checking before let him go free.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
05:00 PM on 04/17/2012
And a hearty Kumbayah to you, Fourcents.  In 15 to 21 years, he will be released.  Still be in relatively young and in good shape after having enjoyed the wonderful amenities of the Norwegian penal system, and, after he kills a few more dozen kids, you can wring your hands in tearful sympathy for his victimization, again.
10:29 PM on 05/10/2012
Why was Hezbollah teaching the young people of Norway to HATE Israelis?
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anitaj
06:45 PM on 04/17/2012
It seems that Mr. Breivik was "cursed" long before he pulled the trigger. The symptoms he displays do not develop overnight.

The article states that if found competent, he could be sentenced to "an alternate custody arrangement under which the sentence is prolonged for as long as an inmate is deemed a danger to society."

If that is the case, it seems doubtful that he would ever see daylight again. Which is as it should be.
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Wisdo
semantics shamantics
05:51 AM on 04/17/2012
Surely there must be a more effective punishment for killing 77 people than 25 years in jail (of which he will probably only serve 10).
06:46 AM on 04/17/2012
The maximum punishment in Norway is 21 years imprisonment, where early release after 14 years is the norm.

However, there's a provision in the law for protecting society against dangerous individuals. If the court deems that a violent crime is due to a permanent personality disorder, this provision is applicable.

Named "forvaring" (loosely translated as "keeping in custody"), it can be time limited or, in serious cases, indefinite. Within the time scope of the sentence of "forvaring", the convict will be kept imprisoned until he/she is considered safe for release. When the sentence is indefinite, the convicted can remain imprisoned for life. This isn't intended as punishment, though the difference may be lost on the convicted.

Anders Behring Breivik has been diagnosed (by the second psychiatric panel) with Narcissistic Personality Disorder, with additional, strong traits from other personality disorders. A personality disorder doesn't go to sanity as such, but are extreme personality traits. While they can be slightly tempered with age, they can't be cured or treated. In the case of Narcissistic Personality Disorder, these traits include lack of empathy, and an extreme sense of one's own importance and excellence. In Breivik's case, these traits are so strong that they will never be sufficiently tempered for him to be considered safe for release.

In other words: If Breivik is considered legally sane, he will be sentenced to 21 years imprisonment and indefinite "forvaring". That last bit will ensure that he will never be released.
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
04:32 PM on 04/17/2012
Why doesn't Norway only charge him for a few deaths now and then bring more charges in 14 or 21 years. Seventy-seven deaths could not be treated the same as one.
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PhotoTronTheDaddyPhantom
Proud to be an American of African Descent
09:15 AM on 04/17/2012
There is. It's called Karma.