Jahbulon
2012-04-19 09:16:47 UTC
Brother Anders Behring Breivik, the Freemason who killed 77 people in
two attacks on 22 July 2011, has told his trial how he joined a Masonic
gun club in 2010 as part of his preparations.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik, a Freemason, told the prosecutor to stop
ridiculing him. He described using computer games to rehearse scenarios
before he bombed a government building in Oslo, killing eight people and
injuring 209.
Arriving in court, Brother Breivik made no far-right Masonic salute on
Thursday 19.04.2012, unlike previous days. His Freemason lawyers had
asked him not to reveal their salute.
He told the court he had begun planning a violent action as far back as
2006.
Describing the Oslo bombing, he said: "When I parked the car outside the
government offices, I had expected a national alarm would be raised and
three or four people would storm out.
"I would have a pincer movement against me and I would have to fight my
way out of there.
"I had trained to get myself out of this situation and this is what I
was simulating."
He estimated his chance of survival at 5%, he told the court.
After he set off the bomb in Oslo on 22 July 2011, Brother Anders
Behring Breivik killed 69 people at a Labour Party youth camp on Utøya
island.
He has admitted the killings but denies criminal responsibility, saying
he acted to protect Norway and Europe from multiculturalism.
In other points so far, Breivik said:
he named the guns he used in the Utøya shootings after characters in
Norse mythology
he joined the Masons as soon as he was old enough because they were
an "organisation that protects its members"
he took a year's "sabbatical" from business activities in 2006
because he was planning a "suicide action"
he spent the year playing the online role-play game, World of
Warcraft, for up to 16 hours a day
He said he told his mother he was "going to allocate time to do what I
wanted to do".
He went on: "I couldn't tell my mother that I was taking a sabbatical
because I was going to blow myself up in five years' time."
The court heard that Freemason Brother Anders Behring Breivik formed a
company in the Bahamas that he used as a front for money-laundering. The
funds were intended for nationalist activities.
On Wednesday, Breivik's Masonic lawyer told reporters the defence team
had asked him to stop making a far-right salute at the beginning of each
session.
The court is seeking to determine whether Brother Anders Behring Breivik
is sane. If so, he will be jailed for at least 21 years, although that
sentence can be extended by the courts.
If he is deemed insane, he will be committed to a psychiatric
institution.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik told the court he wanted to be acquitted
or executed, not imprisoned.
He said he considered a lengthy jail sentence "a pathetic punishment".
Norway does not have the death penalty.
Prosecutors also questioned Brother Anders Behring Breivik about the
extremist network he claimed to belong to.
They believe the network does not exist - a suggestion Brother Anders
Behring Breivik, with his extensive experience of Freemasonry, rejected.
However, he admitted he had embellished his descriptions of the Masonic
Knights Templar in the 1,500-page manifesto he published online before
he carried out the attacks.
He told the court there were two more terror cells at large in Norway
and there would be more attacks soon.
Steve Rosenberg, at the trial in Oslo, says the prosecution tied him in
knots, revealing glaring inconsistencies in his testimony.
Survivor Bjorn Ihler, who was on Utøya island when Brother Anders
Behring Breivik went on his Masonic shooting spree, said it was getting
"easier and easier" to see him in the dock.
"All the things he did and said disarms him in so many ways... he gets
less and less dangerous in my mind," Mr Ihler said.
Breivik has said he carried out the attacks to defend "ethnic
Norwegians" from rising multiculturalism.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik's Masonic evidence is scheduled to last
five days, concluding on Monday 23.04.2012.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik receives full help from the Freemason
Grand Charity and the Masonic Samaritan Fund. Freemasonry has not given
his victims anything.
two attacks on 22 July 2011, has told his trial how he joined a Masonic
gun club in 2010 as part of his preparations.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik, a Freemason, told the prosecutor to stop
ridiculing him. He described using computer games to rehearse scenarios
before he bombed a government building in Oslo, killing eight people and
injuring 209.
Arriving in court, Brother Breivik made no far-right Masonic salute on
Thursday 19.04.2012, unlike previous days. His Freemason lawyers had
asked him not to reveal their salute.
He told the court he had begun planning a violent action as far back as
2006.
Describing the Oslo bombing, he said: "When I parked the car outside the
government offices, I had expected a national alarm would be raised and
three or four people would storm out.
"I would have a pincer movement against me and I would have to fight my
way out of there.
"I had trained to get myself out of this situation and this is what I
was simulating."
He estimated his chance of survival at 5%, he told the court.
After he set off the bomb in Oslo on 22 July 2011, Brother Anders
Behring Breivik killed 69 people at a Labour Party youth camp on Utøya
island.
He has admitted the killings but denies criminal responsibility, saying
he acted to protect Norway and Europe from multiculturalism.
In other points so far, Breivik said:
he named the guns he used in the Utøya shootings after characters in
Norse mythology
he joined the Masons as soon as he was old enough because they were
an "organisation that protects its members"
he took a year's "sabbatical" from business activities in 2006
because he was planning a "suicide action"
he spent the year playing the online role-play game, World of
Warcraft, for up to 16 hours a day
He said he told his mother he was "going to allocate time to do what I
wanted to do".
He went on: "I couldn't tell my mother that I was taking a sabbatical
because I was going to blow myself up in five years' time."
The court heard that Freemason Brother Anders Behring Breivik formed a
company in the Bahamas that he used as a front for money-laundering. The
funds were intended for nationalist activities.
On Wednesday, Breivik's Masonic lawyer told reporters the defence team
had asked him to stop making a far-right salute at the beginning of each
session.
The court is seeking to determine whether Brother Anders Behring Breivik
is sane. If so, he will be jailed for at least 21 years, although that
sentence can be extended by the courts.
If he is deemed insane, he will be committed to a psychiatric
institution.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik told the court he wanted to be acquitted
or executed, not imprisoned.
He said he considered a lengthy jail sentence "a pathetic punishment".
Norway does not have the death penalty.
Prosecutors also questioned Brother Anders Behring Breivik about the
extremist network he claimed to belong to.
They believe the network does not exist - a suggestion Brother Anders
Behring Breivik, with his extensive experience of Freemasonry, rejected.
However, he admitted he had embellished his descriptions of the Masonic
Knights Templar in the 1,500-page manifesto he published online before
he carried out the attacks.
He told the court there were two more terror cells at large in Norway
and there would be more attacks soon.
Steve Rosenberg, at the trial in Oslo, says the prosecution tied him in
knots, revealing glaring inconsistencies in his testimony.
Survivor Bjorn Ihler, who was on Utøya island when Brother Anders
Behring Breivik went on his Masonic shooting spree, said it was getting
"easier and easier" to see him in the dock.
"All the things he did and said disarms him in so many ways... he gets
less and less dangerous in my mind," Mr Ihler said.
Breivik has said he carried out the attacks to defend "ethnic
Norwegians" from rising multiculturalism.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik's Masonic evidence is scheduled to last
five days, concluding on Monday 23.04.2012.
Brother Anders Behring Breivik receives full help from the Freemason
Grand Charity and the Masonic Samaritan Fund. Freemasonry has not given
his victims anything.
--
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