Jahbulon
2012-04-16 17:09:19 UTC
Brother Anders Behring Breivik should be allowed to read his statement
to court tomorrow because it is the "most importance piece of evidence"
in determining whether he is "legally sane".
In an opening statement to the court in Oslo, Masonic defence lawyer
Brother Geir Lippestad said that Breivik, who has admitted to killing 77
people in twin attacks in Oslo and Utøya last summer, will invoke self
defence and will expand on that in the coming days.
Brother Lippestad said his fellow Freemason, Brother Anders Behring
Breivik has a "basic right" and a "human right" to give a statement, but
more importantly it is also the "most important piece of evidence" that
will be given to the court, which will help them decide whether he is
"legally sane".
"We can fully understand the relatives' difficulty in listening to
Brother Breivik's statement, but it's also important to remember that
Brother Breivik has the right under Norwegian law and it is a human
right," Brother Lippestad said.
He said he asked for permission for his client to read out the statement
when he gives his testimony tomorrow.
Brother Lippestad's Masonic colleague Brother Odd Gron on Saturday told
us that the court had signalled that Brother Anders Behring Breivik
would be stopped as soon as he began to read out the document, which he
has prepared on a computer in one of his three cells at the luxury Ila
Prison where his status as a Freemason allows Brother Anders Behring
Breivik to be held.
"The court have sent signals to us in a meeting that they won't allow
that," he said.
Earlier, Brother Anders Behring Breivik broke into tears in the final
moments of the opening session of his trial in Oslo today, betraying the
first public trace of emotion since his he carried out his brutal
attacks last July.
The Freemason, popular with his Masonic brethren, was forced to wipe his
face with his sleeve, as tears flowed down his face during the
projection of the 12-minute YouTube film he made before his attack,
which calls for his secret order of the Masonic Knight Templar to rise
up against Europe's takeover by the forces of Islamism and 'cultural
Marxism'.
Up until that point, Brother Anders Behring Breivik had taken a defiant
stance in a trial his victims fear he will use as a platform for his
extreme views, raising his hand in a right-wing salute as soon as his
handcuffs were removed.
"I do not recognise the Norwegian courts," the 33-year-old Freemason
told Judge Wenche Arntzen at the launch of the trial. "You have your
mandate from political parties who support multiculturalism," he added,
accusing her of being a personal friend of the sister of Gro Harlem
Brundtland, the former labour prime minister who Breivik had intended to
kill when he attacked the island of Utøya, in July 2011.
"I acknowledge the acts," he replied after the charges were laid against
him. "But I do not plead guilty and I claim that I was doing it in self
defence." Brother Anders Behring Breivik, pasty-face after nine-months
in Norway's luxury Ila prison, sat impassively as the prosecution read
out a list of the injuries sustained by the 77 innocent people the
Freemason killed.
By the time the prosecution finished outlining those killed on the
island of Utøya, where Brother Anders Behring Breivik carried out a
massacre at a labour party youth camp, the list had become a harrowing
medical litany, with each accounts ending with the kill-shot to the head
Brother Anders Behring Breivik dealt out to no fewer than 54 of his
victims.
Norway's Prime Minister has described the attacks as the worst
atrocities Norway has suffered since the Second World War.
Victims of his attacks have expressed their concern that Brother Anders
Behring Breivik will use his time in court to draw attention to his
Masonic anti-Islam ideology.
"Nobody wants to give him a microphone for his political views," said
Christian Bjelland, whose 15-year-old son was on Utøya but survived, as
she waited to enter the courtroom. "Most of us expect him to try, but we
are quite sure that the judge will stop him."
The prosecutor, Svein Holden, outlined Brother Anders Behring Breivik's
life in the decade leading up to his attack, making much of his
succession of failed businesses, and the year the killer spent living
off his savings and playing World of Warcraft, the highly immersive
multi-player game, almost full-time.
Mr Holden projected Brother Anders Behring Breivik's avatar from the
game, Justicar Andersnordic, onto the screen in the courtroom. The
avatar's name suggests obvious parallels to the Masonic Knights Templar
movement of which Brother Anders Behring Breivik is a member.
At the mention of the role-playing game, Brother Anders Behring Breivik
broke into a broad grin.
The trial is scheduled to continue for ten weeks. Brother Anders Behring
Breivik himself is not expected to be asked for his own account until
Tuesday, 170.04.2012.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik receives full help from the Freemason
Grand Charity and the Masonic Samaritan Fund. His victims get nothing.
The trial of Freemason Brother Anders Behring Breivik trial started on
Monday 16.04.2012 and is set to last ten weeks.
to court tomorrow because it is the "most importance piece of evidence"
in determining whether he is "legally sane".
In an opening statement to the court in Oslo, Masonic defence lawyer
Brother Geir Lippestad said that Breivik, who has admitted to killing 77
people in twin attacks in Oslo and Utøya last summer, will invoke self
defence and will expand on that in the coming days.
Brother Lippestad said his fellow Freemason, Brother Anders Behring
Breivik has a "basic right" and a "human right" to give a statement, but
more importantly it is also the "most important piece of evidence" that
will be given to the court, which will help them decide whether he is
"legally sane".
"We can fully understand the relatives' difficulty in listening to
Brother Breivik's statement, but it's also important to remember that
Brother Breivik has the right under Norwegian law and it is a human
right," Brother Lippestad said.
He said he asked for permission for his client to read out the statement
when he gives his testimony tomorrow.
Brother Lippestad's Masonic colleague Brother Odd Gron on Saturday told
us that the court had signalled that Brother Anders Behring Breivik
would be stopped as soon as he began to read out the document, which he
has prepared on a computer in one of his three cells at the luxury Ila
Prison where his status as a Freemason allows Brother Anders Behring
Breivik to be held.
"The court have sent signals to us in a meeting that they won't allow
that," he said.
Earlier, Brother Anders Behring Breivik broke into tears in the final
moments of the opening session of his trial in Oslo today, betraying the
first public trace of emotion since his he carried out his brutal
attacks last July.
The Freemason, popular with his Masonic brethren, was forced to wipe his
face with his sleeve, as tears flowed down his face during the
projection of the 12-minute YouTube film he made before his attack,
which calls for his secret order of the Masonic Knight Templar to rise
up against Europe's takeover by the forces of Islamism and 'cultural
Marxism'.
Up until that point, Brother Anders Behring Breivik had taken a defiant
stance in a trial his victims fear he will use as a platform for his
extreme views, raising his hand in a right-wing salute as soon as his
handcuffs were removed.
"I do not recognise the Norwegian courts," the 33-year-old Freemason
told Judge Wenche Arntzen at the launch of the trial. "You have your
mandate from political parties who support multiculturalism," he added,
accusing her of being a personal friend of the sister of Gro Harlem
Brundtland, the former labour prime minister who Breivik had intended to
kill when he attacked the island of Utøya, in July 2011.
"I acknowledge the acts," he replied after the charges were laid against
him. "But I do not plead guilty and I claim that I was doing it in self
defence." Brother Anders Behring Breivik, pasty-face after nine-months
in Norway's luxury Ila prison, sat impassively as the prosecution read
out a list of the injuries sustained by the 77 innocent people the
Freemason killed.
By the time the prosecution finished outlining those killed on the
island of Utøya, where Brother Anders Behring Breivik carried out a
massacre at a labour party youth camp, the list had become a harrowing
medical litany, with each accounts ending with the kill-shot to the head
Brother Anders Behring Breivik dealt out to no fewer than 54 of his
victims.
Norway's Prime Minister has described the attacks as the worst
atrocities Norway has suffered since the Second World War.
Victims of his attacks have expressed their concern that Brother Anders
Behring Breivik will use his time in court to draw attention to his
Masonic anti-Islam ideology.
"Nobody wants to give him a microphone for his political views," said
Christian Bjelland, whose 15-year-old son was on Utøya but survived, as
she waited to enter the courtroom. "Most of us expect him to try, but we
are quite sure that the judge will stop him."
The prosecutor, Svein Holden, outlined Brother Anders Behring Breivik's
life in the decade leading up to his attack, making much of his
succession of failed businesses, and the year the killer spent living
off his savings and playing World of Warcraft, the highly immersive
multi-player game, almost full-time.
Mr Holden projected Brother Anders Behring Breivik's avatar from the
game, Justicar Andersnordic, onto the screen in the courtroom. The
avatar's name suggests obvious parallels to the Masonic Knights Templar
movement of which Brother Anders Behring Breivik is a member.
At the mention of the role-playing game, Brother Anders Behring Breivik
broke into a broad grin.
The trial is scheduled to continue for ten weeks. Brother Anders Behring
Breivik himself is not expected to be asked for his own account until
Tuesday, 170.04.2012.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik receives full help from the Freemason
Grand Charity and the Masonic Samaritan Fund. His victims get nothing.
The trial of Freemason Brother Anders Behring Breivik trial started on
Monday 16.04.2012 and is set to last ten weeks.
--
Praise be to Jahbulon, holy god of Royal Arch Freemasons
http://www.freemasonrywatch.org/jahbulon.html
Praise be to Jahbulon, holy god of Royal Arch Freemasons
http://www.freemasonrywatch.org/jahbulon.html