Norway killer Anders Behring Breivik found insane, unfit for prison

? Confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik belongs in psychiatric care instead of prison, prosecutors in Norway said Tuesday after a mental evaluation declared him legally insane during a bomb-and-shooting rampage that killed 77 people.

The court-ordered assessment found that the self-styled anti-Muslim militant was psychotic during the July 22 attacks, which would make him mentally unfit to be convicted and imprisoned for the country’s worst peacetime massacre.

The report, written by two psychiatrists who spent a total of 36 hours talking to Breivik, will be reviewed by a forensic panel before the Oslo district court makes a ruling on his mental state.

Their conclusions surprised many outside experts and contrasted with earlier comments by the head of the review panel, who told The Associated Press in late July that it was unlikely that Breivik would be declared insane because the attacks were so carefully planned and executed.

But prosecutors insisted the psychiatric report describes a man living in a “delusional universe” — a paranoid schizophrenic who’s lost touch with reality.

“After having read the documents of the case, the conclusion did not come as a surprise,” Prosecutor Svein Holden told AP.

Breivik, 32, has confessed to setting off a bomb that ripped through Oslo’s government district, killing eight people, then opening fire at the summer camp of the governing Labor Party’s youth wing. Sixty-nine people died in the mayhem at Utoya island, outside the Norwegian capital, before Breivik surrendered to a SWAT team.

He denies criminal guilt, saying he’s a commander of a resistance movement aiming to overthrow European governments and replace them with “patriotic” regimes that will deport Muslim immigrants.

Investigators have found no sign of such a movement and say Breivik most likely plotted and carried out the attacks on his own.

“The conclusion of the forensic experts is that Anders Behring Breivik was insane” and that he during an extended period “developed the mental disorder of paranoid schizophrenia, which has changed him and made him into the person he is today,” Holden said.

The two psychiatrists — Torgeir Husby and Synne Soerheim — met Breivik 13 times. Husby told AP that their conclusions were “clear” and unanimous.

Breivik’s lawyer Geir Lippestad, who early on suggested his client was insane, told Norwegian broadcaster NRK that he wasn’t surprised by the psychiatric assessment.

“It is obvious that the matter has taken a completely new turn,” Lippestad said.

In Norway, an insanity defense requires that a defendant be in a state of psychosis while committing the crime. That means the defendant has lost contact with reality to the point that he’s no longer in control of his own actions.

The 243-page report will be reviewed by a panel from the Norwegian Board of Forensic Medicine, which could ask for additional information and add its own opinions. The head of the panel, Dr. Tarjei Rygnestad, called the conclusions “interesting.”

In July, Rygnestad said that a psychotic person typically struggles to perform even simple tasks like driving a car, and that the advanced planning and skills required for Breivik’s attacks spoke against psychosis.

On Tuesday, Rygnestad told AP that his earlier comments were based on “secondary information” and that a person’s mental state can only be determined through in-depth analysis. He said he had not read the full report yet, but maintained his assertion that psychotic people typically aren’t able to carry out complex tasks that require intricate planning.

“Usually not. Then again, unusual things also happen,” he said.

Frode Elgesem, a lawyer for the Labor Party’s youth group, said the outcome of the evaluation was unexpected.

“What we have seen is dangerous and calculating man,” Elgesem told AP. “That said the experts have a much broader basis for their conclusion. It is difficult to overrule that.”

Stine Renate Haaheim, a 27-year-old Labor Party lawmaker who survived the Utoya shootings, said she believes in Norway’s legal tradition of not punishing criminals who are declared mentally ill. “But at the same time society has to protect itself,” she added.

In neighboring Sweden, the forensic psychiatrist who examined the man who killed Foreign Minister Anna Lindh in 2003, expressed doubts about Breivik’s diagnosis, given his extensive planning and the gruesome efficiency with which he slaughtered youth at Utoya. Disguised as a police officer, Breivik lured youths from their hiding places, then executed them. He also reportedly had calculated how many victims he would be able to kill before being arrested.

“It is difficult to see this as criminal insanity,” Anders Forsman told AP. “He seems to have carried out the killings in a rational way. He is an efficient killing machine.”

Holden said Breivik claims he committed the atrocities “out of love for his people” and describes himself as a crusader knight with special powers to decide “who is to live and who is to die.” Breivik considers himself a future ruler of Norway and was planning to establish “breeding projects” for Norwegians, Holden said.

Breivik’s trial is set to begin in April. If declared mentally fit and convicted of terrorism, he would face up to 21 years in prison or an alternative custody arrangement that could keep him behind bars indefinitely.

Prosecutor Inga Bejer Engh said that if the courts declare him insane, he would be given three-year terms of psychiatric care that can extended for as long as necessary.

“If he is sentenced to compulsory mental health care, we are confident that the regulatory framework that exists is sufficient and appropriate to ensure for the needs of protection of society,” she said.


Ritter contributed from Stockholm.