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Breivik won't appeal sentence, regrets not killing more

FP Archives August 25, 2012, 10:12:57 IST

Earlier Friday, Judge Wenche Elisabeth Arntzen read the ruling, declaring Breivik sane enough to be held criminally responsible and sentencing him to “preventive detention,” which means it is unlikely he will ever be released.

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Breivik won't appeal sentence, regrets not killing more

Oslo: Accepting a sentence that could keep him imprisoned for life, Anders Behring Breivik regretted not killing more people in a bomb and gun massacre that left 77 people dead. Breivik’s gruesome and defiant statement today marked the end of a legal process that has haunted Norway for 13 months. Prosecutors said they, too, would not appeal the ruling by Oslo’s district court, which declared the right-wing extremist sane enough to be held criminally responsible for attacks “unparalleled in Norwegian history.” [caption id=“attachment_430092” align=“alignleft” width=“380”] Anders Behring Breivik regretted not killing more people in a bomb and gun massacre that left 77 people dead. AP[/caption] “Since I don’t recognise the authority of the court I cannot legitimise the Oslo district court by accepting the verdict,” Breivik said. “At the same time I cannot appeal the verdict, because by appealing it I would legitimise the court.” Then, Breivik said he wanted to issue an apology, but it wasn’t for the victims, most of them teenagers gunned down in one of the worst peacetime shooting massacres in modern history. “I wish to apologise to all militant nationalists that I wasn’t able to execute more,” Breivik said. Earlier Friday, Breivik smiled with apparent satisfaction when Judge Wenche Elisabeth Arntzen read the ruling, declaring him sane enough to be held criminally responsible and sentencing him to “preventive detention,” which means it is unlikely he will ever be released. The sentence brings a form of closure to Norway, which was shaken to its core by the attacks on 22 July 2011, because Breivik’s lawyers said before the verdict that he would not appeal any ruling that did not declare him insane. Since his arrest, Breivik has said the attacks were meant to draw attention to his extreme right-wing ideology and to inspire a multi-decade uprising by “militant nationalists” across Europe. AP

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