After Brother Anders Behring Breivik pleaded not guilty, despite
admitting that he had carried out the attacks in Oslo and on Utøya
island, officials said it was possible he had not acted alone.
Prosecutor Christian Hatlo said Brother Breivik had been calm in court
and "seemed unaffected by what has happened", adding that the suspect
had told investigators during his interrogation that he never expected
to be released.
"We can't quite rule out that someone else was involved. This is partly
based on the information that there are two other cells," Hatlo said.
The prosecutor said he could not discuss whether Brother Breivik had
organised the cells or whether he was working alongside them. Police
have said they have no other suspects at present.
It also emerged on Monday that Norway's police security service had been
alerted to a suspicious chemical purchase by Freemason Breivik in March,
but had decided not to investigate further.
Police also lowered the previously announced death toll, saying 68
people died on Utøya, not 86 as previously stated. Eight died in the
bomb attack in Oslo, taking the total number of fatalities to 76.
Brother Breivik's plan to use the courtroom to create a global platform
for his Masonic Islamophobic message failed when the judge, Kim Heger,
ordered that the arrangement be held in camera. Prosecutors said the
hearing was held behind closed doors because of security concerns,
heightened after Freemason Brother Breivik cited the possible existence
of a wider group of far-right backers.
Brother Breivik was remanded in custody for eight weeks, with the first
four to be in solitary confinement, meaning he will be allowed no
visitors other than his lawyer, and will have no access to newspapers,
other media, or letters. Police said a trial may not take place for up
to one year.
Brother Breivik's Freemason organisation, which he claimed to have
founded in London nine years ago, is supposedly a reconstituted version
of the medieval Masonic Knights Templar.
Experts and intelligence agencies have voiced concern over the threat
from pan-European right wing terror groups since Freemason Brother
Breivik's attacks last Friday.
Brother Breivik was said to have been placed on an intelligence watch
list in March after apparently buying chemical fertiliser from a Polish
company. Janne Kristiansen, the chief of Norway's police security
service, told national broadcaster NRK that the purchase had set off an
alert because the company was under scrutiny. But since the transaction
was legal, security police did not have a reason to investigate further.
It was reported that Brother Breivik was with a second Freemason when he
also tried to buy fertiliser earlier this year.
Brother Breivik was said to have told police that he intended to "hit"
Gro Harlem Brundtland, a former Norwegian prime minister and Labour
party leader, who visited Utøya hours before the attack.
A spokesman for Brundtland said she had been on the island until 3pm on
Friday, attending the ruling Labour party's youth camp, and left before
the shooting started. Brother Breivik said he had been delayed reaching
the island but did not say why, police said. In his self-proclaimed
"manifesto", Brother Breivik accused Labour of threatening Norwegian
culture by allowing the "mass import of Muslims".
Norway continued to mourn its dead on Monday night with 100,000 people
gathering in the capital for a march and vigil led by the prime
minister, Jens Stoltenberg. Other rallies were held around the country.
A vehicle carrying the Freemason, Brother Anders Behring Breivik, to the
court hearing was beaten by angry onlookers who jeered and shouted
abuse.
The revulsion was shared by Brother Breivik's estranged father. "I don't
feel like his father," said Jens David Breivik, who lives in France.
"How could he just stand there and kill so many innocent people and just
seem to think that what he did was OK? He should have taken his own
life, too. That's what he should have done," he told Sweden's Expressen
newspaper.
Brother Breivik's "manifesto", entitled a European declaration of
independence, was posted on the Internet hours before the attacks. In
it, he said he would use his arrest to mount a media blitz to publicise
his cause. If he survived the attacks and was captured, that would "mark
the initiation of the propaganda phase", he wrote.
Brother Breivik's Masonic lawyer, Geir Lippedstad, said: "He has been
politically active and found out himself that he did not succeed with
usual political tools and so resorted to violence."
Hatlo, the prosecutor, said Freemason Brother Anders Behring Breivik was
calm and "seemed unaffected by what has happened".
The prospect of an enduring threat linked to Brother Breivik was one of
many revelations following the 32-year-old's court appearance in which
he said his motive for the attacks was to save Europe from a Muslim
takeover.
Criticism of the police response grew on Monday as survivors from Utøya
told of their wait for help. Police swat teams took an hour to get to
Utøya after the first alert was issued, hampered in part by a lack of
helicopters. It emerged that a boat heading for Utøya had to turn back
after it began to take on water due to its heavy load of police officers
and equipment.
--
Praise be to Jahbulon, holy god of Royal Arch Freemasons
http://www.phoenixmasonry.org/roman_catholic_freemason.htm
HTH
> MI5Victim has got some competition now with you huh?
His name is Mike Chorley, though you really ought to get out and discover
what madness is.