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When prosecutors indicted Breivik on terror and murder charges last month, they cited the first assessment and said they would seek compulsory psychiatric care instead of imprisonment unless new information about his mental health emerged. Breivik claims he's not insane and wrote a letter to Norwegian media saying the first review was based on lies. After the attacks, Breivik told investigators that he was part of a right-wing militant group plotting to overthrow European governments in a "patriotic" revolution that would lead to the deportation of Muslim immigrants from Europe. Police, however, found no trace of his so-called Knights Templar organization, and say he planned and carried out the attacks on his own.
[Associated
Press;
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