Norway suspect: Killings in self-defense
OSLO -- Anders Behring Breivik shed tears as he went on trial yesterday for killing 77 people -- but not for his victims. The emotional display came when prosecutors showed his anti-Muslim video.
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. His face cringed and he 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.
"I don't recognize Norwegian courts because you get your mandate from the Norwegian political parties who support multiculturalism," Breivik, 33, said the first time he addressed the court.
He also announced he doesn't recognize the authority of Judge Wenche Elisabeth Arntzen because he said she is friends with the sister of former Prime Minister and Labor Party leader Gro Harlem Brundtland.
Eight people were killed in Breivik's bombing of Oslo's government district and 69 more 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.
Norway has a legal principle of preventive self-defense, but that doesn't apply to Breivik's case, said Jarl Borgvin Doerre, a legal expert who has written a book about it. "It is obvious that it has nothing to do with preventive self-defense," he said.
6 injured in Penn Station stabbings ... Previewing Knicks Game 3 tonight ... LI Catholic group's challenge to diocese ... Out East: Jamesport Country Store
6 injured in Penn Station stabbings ... Previewing Knicks Game 3 tonight ... LI Catholic group's challenge to diocese ... Out East: Jamesport Country Store



