Shots in the Bærum Mosque, Philip Manshaus



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Philip Manshaus conducted frequent web searches for racial warfare, weapons and mass shootings two years before the attack. In the second and third quarters of 2019, online activity increased.

OSLO / SANDVIKA (NTB, Nettavisen): On Saturday August 3, 2019, a week before the murder of the stepsister and the attack on the mosque, Philip Manshaus first conducted a web search for “mosque”, “Bærum” and “al-Noor” from your PC. It shows the Oslo police record of the online activity of the murder and the 22-year-old accused terrorist. Research shows that during the same period, Manshaus searched Google Maps for the address of the mosque, and purchased a vest and a GoPro camera.

At this time, Manshaus has shown a keen interest in racial warfare, weapons, and mass shootings. It shows the fingerprints you have left behind.

Also read: Police officer: – Manshaus appeared as a child

As early as the summer of 2018, PST received advice on Manshaus. The tip was revised, but recognized. The management of the PST tip is being reviewed by an expert committee that will conclude in June. At the same time, Manshaus was active on the Internet, reading about Anders Behring Breivik and looking for things like “world massacres” and about weapons and gun regulations.

Also read: This is why PST did not follow Manshaus advice

The police officer who reviewed digital clues at Asker and Bærum District Court on Thursday presented an overview showing strong online activity in the weeks and months leading up to the date of the arrest, August 10, 2019.

In the second and third quarters of 2019, Manshaus online activity skyrockets. The record of the pages you visit and the words you search speak their plain language about a person seeking information from right-wing websites and chat groups who is concerned with race, national socialism, the Holocaust, weapons, massacres and murders such as Anders Behring Breivik and Brenton Tarrant.

– Directly inspired

Brenton Tarrant is the author of the attacks on the Christchurch Mosque in New Zealand in March 2019, killing 51 people.

“The accused appears to be directly inspired by Tarrant, and the Tarrant manifesto is a central source of inspiration and guidance for planning and carrying out the attack,” PST analyst Caroline Cecilie Iwarsson said in court on Thursday.

He reviewed, among other things, a newspaper in which Manshaus writes somewhere about his own role in what he embraces as an ongoing racial war: “I think I have a spirit that can handle the burden of leadership.”

Also read: You must have planned a terror attack in downtown Oslo

He searched for mass shootings

In the period from the fourth quarter of 2017 to the second quarter of 2018, search for words like “Nazi”, “Black”, “Jew”, “Genocide”, “Breivik”, “Holocaust”, “Nordic resistance movement”, “4chan “and” 8 chan “. “(Chat forum),” Heath High School “(scene of the Kentucky school shooting in 1997),” Jokela “(scene of the 2007 school massacre in Finland), the Israeli genealogy website Myheritage and a person named in the neo-Nazi organization The Nordic Resistance Movement.

In the period between the third quarter of 2018 and the first quarter of 2019, search and visit pages that include, among others, Jordan Peterson, Regulation on Arms and Weapons, Jews, terrorism, Anders Behring Breivik, 1488 (White Power Reference) , “Genocide”, the neo-Nazi website Nordfront and Freedom Camp (the online newspaper of the Nordic resistance movement).

Click on the photo to enlarge. COURT: District Court Judge Annika Lindström is leading the case against the terrorist and murder charged Philip Manshaus in the Asker and Bærum District Court.

COURT: District Court Judge Annika Lindström is leading the case against the terrorist and murder charged Philip Manshaus in the Asker and Bærum District Court.
Photo: Lise Åserud (NTB scanpix)

Getting interested in Christchurch

On March 15, 2019, Brenton Tarrant launches his attack against two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. Obviously, this caught the attention of Philip Manshaus. During this period, searches include “St. Tarrant”, “Christchurch”, “video shoot”, “used weapons for sale” and the gun shop of the Oslo Shooting Center.

In April 2019, watch the rightists on YouTube and Bitchute and enter the chat forum on 4Chan and 8chan and play Tribalwars with the username “14WhitePower88”, the latter until it is blocked on July 20. Otherwise, visit sites like Myheritage (where he orders a DNA test), Whitedates, and Freedom Struggle.

In April 2019 and until arrest, search for Christchurch, Breivik, Tarrant.

Click on the photo to enlarge. Philip Manshaus by car just before the terrorist attack on the Al-Noor Mosque in Bærum on Saturday 10.08.19 The image is from the GoPro camera to Philip Manshaus. After approx. For 6 seconds, the aiming camera rotates on itself so you can see your face and the back of the car. In the back seat are several two-handed weapons. Aiming with the camera, backs up approx. 15 seconds in the movie and you probably put / put the camera on your head. After approx. 20 seconds, the defendant probably says:

USED ​​CAMERA: Philip Manshaus in the car just before the terrorist attack on the Al-Noor Mosque in Bærum on Saturday August 10. The drawing was made because of the video image from the GoPro camera he used.
Photo: Drawing: Siv Grethe Bøhn-Pettersen / Amedia

Get a protective vest and GoPro camera

On August 4, 2019, confirmation of the purchase order for the Tactical Vest (Protective Vest) will be emailed to Manshaus. On August 5, the purchase of a GoPro camera will be recorded.

Searching for a route on Google Maps became the subject of questions in the district court on Thursday. The defendant is not known to have driven this route prior to the attack, nor was any new information provided, but the route to the mosque was searched on Google Maps on the Manshaus PC on August 4 and synced to his phone.

Click on the photo to enlarge. VERNEVEST: Philip Manshaus wore this protective vest when he was arrested. Digital images show that Manshaus received the purchase confirmation by email on August 4.

VERNEVEST: Philip Manshaus wore this protective vest when he was arrested. Digital images show that Manshaus received the purchase confirmation by email on August 4.
Photo: (Police)

Newspaper: “You can handle the burden of leadership”

PST analyst Caroline Cecilie Iwarsson addressed the defendant’s worldview and beliefs, saying digital clues show that he has been concerned with racial theories and what he calls “my people,” the white European.

“I have realized how extensive the psychological warfare being waged against my people is,” he writes in his journal on January 21, 2019. He expresses in various places his perceived frustration that white Europeans are not receiving their well-deserved honor.

“The world is clear on its own, but it is not the fault of my people,” he writes somewhere.

He writes of his own role in wartime warfare:

“I think I have a spirit that can handle the burden of leadership.”

According to Iwarsson, there is no doubt that he refers to himself as a leading figure.

Click on the photo to enlarge. CAMERA IN THE HELMET: The image shows the helmet that Manshaus wore during the attack on the mosque and was attached to the GoPro camera.

CAMERA IN THE HELMET: The image shows the helmet that Manshaus wore during the attack on the mosque and was attached to the GoPro camera.
Photo: (Police)

Cross drawn on the cell door

In January of this year, Philip Manshaus drew a cross with a marker on the door of his cell at the Ila Detention and Prison Center.

That explained the head of the department where he is in custody when he testified in Asker and Bærum district court on Thursday. The 22-year-old was asked to wash it.

Manshaus is detained in the security department where he arrived on August 12 last year, two days after he killed his half-sister Johanne Zhangjia Ihle-Hansen (17) and attacked the Al-Noor Islamic Center in Bærum.

The department head said he was stable, in a good mood, with a good circadian rhythm and following his room.

The prosecutor, Attorney General Johan Øverberg, wanted to know if the accused has shown any feelings, but was told that he seems little affected by the situation he is in, with no visible signs of isolation.

Day 6: the police, the aunt and the brothers testify

On Thursday, three witnesses for the Oslo Police and the Police Security Service explained in the criminal case against Philip Manshaus. The defendant’s aunt and her two brothers also meet to explain.

The defendant accepted the court’s agreement to close the doors under one brother’s explanation and in part under the explanations of the other brother and aunt.

Unni Fries, the Manshaus defender, asked Thursday that these witnesses be able to meet in the courtroom instead of testifying via video link.

The press has appealed the decision behind closed doors, but it is unknown how the court will respond to this appeal.



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