Suspected Breivik sympathizer arrested in France over terrorism fears - Action News
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Suspected Breivik sympathizer arrested in France over terrorism fears

A Norwegian black metal musician and alleged sympathizer of mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik was arrested Tuesday in France on what authorities say was suspicion he could be planning "a large terrorist act."

Known neo-Nazi convicted of manslaughter was planning 'terrorist act,' French authorities say

A Norwegian black metal musician and alleged sympathizer of mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik was arrested Tuesday in France on what authorities say was suspicion he could be planning "a large terrorist act."

The Paris prosecutor's office identified the suspect as Varg Vikernes, a neo-Nazi who earned notoriety in the 1990s after he was convicted for manslaughter in the stabbing death of a fellow band member and for arson attacks on three churches. In a statement, the French interior ministry said he was arrested at his house in rural central France.

Vikernes's French wife, Marie Cachet, was also arrested, the prosecutor's office said. She had recently acquired four rifles, the interior ministry said. Investigators are looking into how the firearms were acquired and what they were for, it added.

Police said Vikernes's "violent" internet postings were proof he posed a potential threat.

Served 16 years for manslaughter

Vikernes, 40, was known in Norwegian black metal circles in the early 1990s under the stage name Count Grishnackh. He played in various black metal bands, including the band Mayhem.

A 1994 photo of Varg Vikernes, a black metal musician who is allegedly a follower of Norwegian mass murdered Anders Behring Breivik, Vikernes was arrested in France Tuesday in suspicion that he was planning a 'large terrorist act.' (Johnny Syversen/NTB Scanpix/Associated Press)

In 1994, he was sentenced to 21 years in prison for the manslaughter of Mayhem band member Oystein Aarseth and arson attacks against three churches. He was released from prison in 2009 after serving 16 years.

He has continued to record music under the name Burzum.

French authorities described Vikernes as a "sympathizer" of Breivik who received his manifesto accusing Muslims of destroying European society. On his blog, Vilkernes acknowledged reading the manifesto but appears to distance himself from Breivik and at one point refers to him as a "nutcase."

Breivik was convicted last year of killing 77 people, most of them teenagers, in 2011 attacks that shook Norway. Breivik first bombed government headquarters in Oslo, killing eight people, before going on a shooting massacre on Utoya island that left 69 dead at a summer camp for young members of the governing Labor Party.

The confessed killer, who dressed as a police officer when he carried out the shootings on Utoya,said the attacks were justified because his victims were traitors for embracing multiculturalism.

A five-judge paneldeclared Breivik sane, and therefore criminally liable, and sentenced him to 21 years inprison. The sentence can be extended for as long as he's considered dangerous to society. Legal experts say that likely means he will be locked up for life.