Norway gunman to appear behind closed doors

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Mon, 25 Jul 2011 8:44p.m.

Anders Brievik

Anders Brievik

By 3news.co.nz staff with AP

The man who confessed to the twin attacks that killed 93 people in Norway will be arraigned in court tonight (NZT).

Anders Behring Breivik, 32, requested an open hearing for his first appearance, so that he could explain his massacre to the public. But it has been decided that the hearing will be held behind closed doors, due to security concerns.

Prosecutors have also asked for eight weeks to prepare their case against Breivik, who has confessed to being behind the bombing in downtown Oslo and a shooting massacre at a youth camp outside the capital. However, he denies criminal responsibility.

His lawyer Geir Lippestad told Norwegian broadcaster NRK that Breivik has requested to appear in a uniform during the hearing, but didn't know what kind.

The search for victims continues and police have not released their names. But Norway's royal court said Monday that those killed at the island retreat included Crown Princess Mette-Marit's stepbrother, an off-duty police officer, who was working there as a security guard.

Court spokeswoman Marianne Hagen told The Associated Press that his name was Trond Berntsen, the son of Mette-Marit's stepfather, who died in 2008.

Meanwhile, French police are searching the suspect's father's home Monday. About a dozen officers surrounded the house in Couranel in southern France, entering and leaving at irregular intervals. The house is cordoned off, and reporters do not have access.

The regional gendarme service confirmed the house was that of Anders Behring Breivik's father but would not comment on the search operation. News reports have said Breivik's father, Jens Breivik, has not been in touch with his son in many years.

The attacks rattled Norway, a small and wealthy country unused to political violence, and known internationally as a peace mediator, prominent foreign aid donor and as home of the Nobel Peace Prize. Survivors of the camp shooting on the Utoya island described how a gunman dressed in a police uniform urged people to come closer and then opened fire, sending panicked youth fleeing into the water.

Police say 86 people were killed. About 90 minutes earlier, a car bomb exploded in the government district in central Oslo, killing seven.

More than 90 people were wounded, and others remain missing at both crime scenes.

Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten, without citing sources, reported that Breivik told investigators that he had hoped to reach the island while former Prime Minister Harlem Brundtland was visiting the youth camp of Norway's left-leaning Labour Party, but got there after she had left. Oslo police spokesman Henning Holtaas declined to comment on the report.

Breivik laid out his extreme nationalist philosophy as well as his attack methods in a 1,500-page manifesto. It also describes how he bought armour, guns, tons of fertilizer and other bomb components, stashed caches of weapons and wiping his computer hard drive - all while evading police suspicion and being nice to his neighbours.

Dr. Colin Poole, head of surgery at Ringriket Hospital in Honefoss northwest of Oslo, told The Associated Press that the gunman used special bullets designed to disintegrate inside the body and cause maximum internal damage. Poole said surgeons treating 16 gunshot victims have recovered no full bullets.

"These bullets more or less exploded inside the body," Poole said. "It's caused us all kinds of extra problems in dealing with the wounds they cause, with very strange trajectories."

Ballistics experts say "dum-dum"-style bullets also are lighter in weight and can be fired with greater accuracy over varying distances.

AP

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Comments

26 Jul 2011 07:11a.m.

Ruz wrote:

@ Sarah - consider multiple 21 year sentences to be served consecutively.

25 Jul 2011 10:54p.m.

Sarah wrote:

It's good that they've decided to do a closed hearing, it's quite clear that he wants an open court so that he can spew his message of hate. @ Jan no death penalty or 93 years in prison, in Norway the hardest sentence a court can give for any crime is 21 years, he'll be 53 at the oldest when he is released... I'm strictly against the death penalty but it doesn't seem right to me that he'll get out at 53 still having over a decade left before 'retirement age'. He is clearly criminally insane and society should be protected from him until the day he dies. So sad for you at the moment Norway. Kia Kaha Arohanui

25 Jul 2011 09:53p.m.

jan.. wrote:

Who give this man the right to killed 93 teens, who give him the rights to take what does'nt belong to him.. Who want to listern to a madman but to face death penalty or 93 years imprisonment without parole.. No one will listern to this madman that wanted plublicity but a death row awaits for his evil sins.. This madman and his associates will pay dearly for the lives of the 93 teens and will be no plublicity on this madman's behalf..rethink the families of the 93 teens you murdered won't rest until justice is serve..