Breivik expected to die during his rampage: lawyer

NORWEGIAN MASSACRE
OSLO
ANDERS BEHRING BREIVIK is an emotionally detached man who is surprised no one intervened in the Norwegian massacre and bomb blast he orchestrated, his lawyer says.
“He expected that he would be stopped earlier by police or somebody else,” the defence lawyer Geir Lippestad said yesterday. “He was surprised that he reached the island.”
Mr Breivik expected to be killed after the bombing or during the shooting spree, Mr Lippestad said. It was too early to say whether he was insane.
He described Mr Breivik as “a very cold person” who may have been mentally unwell at the time of the killings.
“This whole case has indicated that he’s insane,” Mr Lippestad said. Even so, “we still have to see the medical reports”.
His client had a view of reality that was difficult to explain. “He believes that he’s in a war and when you’re in a war, he believes you can do things like that.”
Interpol and Scotland Yard are investigating claims that two other cells of people were working with him on his anti-Muslim crusade.
Interpol has asked Scotland Yard for more officers as it trawls through its database of known high-risk extremists after Mr Breivik boasted to police of links in Britain, including the English Defence League (EDL).
It also emerged Mr Breivik was investigated by police in March for a purchase of chemicals but the inquiry was dropped. The incident was judged too insignificant to warrant a follow-up, the head of the Police Security Service, Janne Kristiansen, said.
The British Prime Minister, David Cameron, ordered a review of all far-right groups and said the claims of accomplices were being taken “extremely seriously”.
Mr Breivik, who has admitted killing 76 people in a car-bomb and shooting spree last week, claimed online that he and other activists had met in London to set up a group called the Knights Templar to fight a perceived Islamic takeover of Europe.
He had also written that he had strong links with the EDL. He claimed he had met its leaders and had members as Facebook friends.
The Daily Telegraph reported an anonymous senior member of the EDL saying he believed Mr Breivik had met the group’s leaders when he visited Britain to hear the right-wing Dutch politician Geert Wilders.
“He is someone who can project himself very well, and I presume there would be those within the EDL who would be quite taken by that,” the league member said. “It’s like Hitler; people said he was hypnotic. This guy had the same sort of effect.”
But officially the EDL and other such groups quickly moved to distance themselves from Mr Breivik. The EDL issued a statement condemning the killings and denying links with him.
Mr Breivik’s estranged father, Jens, a retired Norwegian diplomat living in France, tried to distance himself, too. He told reporters, “I don’t feel like his father. 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.”
The death toll was revised down to 76 after police said they believed some bodies had been counted twice in the initial chaos after the massacre.
Ms Kristiansen said Mr Breivik had come to police attention after buying large quantities of fertiliser, an ingredient in bombs. No action could be taken because the purchase was legal and he had a farm, giving him a legitimate use for it.
Police said they were considering charging Mr Breivik with crimes against humanity, which would carry a maximum prison sentence of 30 years, more than the current 21 years he faces for terrorism-related charges.
First published in the Sydney Morning Herald.