Anders Breivik, an anti-Muslim neo-Nazi, killed 77 people in Norway’s worst peacetime atrocity in July 2011. A Norwegian court ruled on Tuesday that far-right attacker Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in 2011, must remain in prison, saying there remains “an obvious risk” he could return to behavior that led up to the massacre. Breivik, an anti-Muslim neo-Nazi, killed 77 people in Norway’s worst peacetime atrocity in July 2011. (…) “The risk of violence is real and significant and equal to what it was when (Breivik) was first sentenced,” the district court said in a unanimous verdict. “His stated assurances and word of honour have little value even if he were to mean what he says at the time he says it,” the judges wrote. Based on the court’s findings, Breivik is unlikely at this time to be able to adjust to life outside of prison, and the risk of recidivism is significant, the judges wrote. (…) A psychiatrist who has observed him since 2012 testified that Breivik cannot be trusted while a prison official told the hearing that “there is an imminent danger” that, if released, Breivik would again commit serious crimes. Breivik’s lawyer Oystein Storrvik said his client should be released to prove that he is reformed and no longer a threat to society, and that is not possible to prove while he is in total isolation. Storrvik called it “a paradox that a person is treated so badly in prison that he never gets better. He never gets out.”
via al jazeera: Norway court rejects mass killer Breivik’s parole request
siehe auch: Anders Breivik, the neo-Nazi responsible for the Otoya massacre still in prison: ‘He can repeat terrorist attacks’. Anders Behring Brevik stay in prison. The person responsible for the deadliest massacre in the world Norway Since World War II he has asked Conditional Freedom After ten in prison: presented himself before the judges with outstretched arm In the Nazi salute there is no sign of remorse for killed 77 people Between Oslo and the island of Utoya, where dozens of young Labor Party youth gathered. The Telemark Court, located in the southeast of the Scandinavian country, explained that “there is a clear risk that repeat Behaviors that led to the July 22, 2011 terrorist attacks.” A decision in line with the public prosecutor’s request and is highly awaited in light of the experience of the psychiatrist who for years has been monitoring him in detention, Randy Rosenqvist. “I believe Breivik’s diagnosis remains the same. The risk of future acts of violence is unchanged compared to 2012 and 2013, when I wrote my first assessment”, in which the far-right terrorist suffers from ‘social, aesthetic and narcissistic’ personality disorders, the expert said.