Monday, August 15, 2011

Breivik back on murder island

MASSACRE monster Anders Breivik once again stalked the island of Utoya - as he showed police how he slaughtered his 69 victims.


Killer ... Anders Breivik
Killer ... Anders Breivik

Tethered to a rope like an animal, he was seen raising his arms in a firing position at the water's edge to demonstrate how he picked off terrified victims as they tried to swim to freedom.
Officers gathering evidence against the 32-year-old beast videoed his every move as he attempted to recall each shot fired with his semi-automatic Ruger Mini 14 rifle.
But the killer - who is proud of his twisted gun rampage - did not show a flicker of remorse during his eight hours at the scene of the horror.
He arrived on the island at 2pm on Saturday - on the same ferry he took on the fateful afternoon of July 22. He was made to wear a bullet-proof vest to guard against revenge attacks.

Flashback ... bodies scattered on the shore of Utoya after Breivik's bloodthirsty rampage last month
Flashback ... bodies scattered on the shore of Utoya after Breivik's bloodthirsty rampage last month

Breivik - who admits the killings but denies any criminal guilt - wore a red shirt and a yellow harness attached to a long rope. He was shadowed by a dozen cops as a police helicopter hovered overhead.
Police could be seen following him past the Utoya club house and up a hill into a wooded area where most of his victims had been camping.

Sinister voyage ... flanked by police on the ferry to the island
Sinister voyage ... flanked by police on the ferry to the island
VG/SCANPIX

Breivik's lawyer, Geir Lippestad, said his client claimed to be able to recall every shot and every person killed.
Lippestad said Breivik believed the massacre was necessary to save Norway from Muslim immigration.

Taking aim ... Anders Breivik shows cops how he shot terrified victims who tried to swim to safety
Taking aim ... Anders Breivik shows cops how he shot terrified victims who tried to swim to safety
VG/SCANPIX

The monster spent years planning the attack on a summer camp of the youth wing of the governing Labour Party, where most of his victims were teenagers or in their 20s. He created a diversion before heading to Utoya by detonating a huge bomb that killed eight near government buildings in the Norwegian capital of Oslo.
The attacks traumatised the Scandinavian nation, which prides itself on its tolerance and multiculturalism.

Path of destruction ... monster leads police into the woods where his victims were camping
Path of destruction ... monster leads police into the woods where his victims were camping
VG/SCANPIX

Prosecutor Paal-Fredrik Hjort Kraby said yesterday: "The suspect showed he wasn't emotionally unaffected by being back at Utoya - but he didn't show remorse. He has been questioned for around 50 hours and has been calm, detailed and collaborative, and that was also the case on Utoya."
Breivik has claimed that he phoned police ten times during the shootings to try to turn himself in - but that eight of his calls went unanswered.

Tethered ... Anders Breivik, with cop, points hands like a pistol by Utoya club house
Tethered ... Anders Breivik, with cop, points hands like a pistol by Utoya club house
VG/SCANPIX

Police officials confirmed yesterday they had received several phone calls from him during the terror attack, but declined to say how they had reacted.
Breivik faces up to 21 years in prison if he is convicted on terrorism charges, but could be caged indefinitely for as long as he is considered dangerous

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