Toulouse school shooting: killer may have used camera equipment suggested by Anders Behring Breivik

Norwegian Breivik, who
last July went on a shooting spree that killed 77 people
, mostly
children, advised anyone wanting to carry out copycat killings to film their
attack using such a camera.

“This extremely small and lightweight field camera is used to document
your operation,” Behring Breivik wrote in an online manifesto published
shortly before he went on the rampage.

“4GB is equivalent to 2 hour of constant filming. I’ve personally tested
it and it works great.”

“Some governments may seize the movie (after you are neutralised) and
publish it while others may bury it or even destroy it to protect the
multiculturalist ideology,” Breivik wrote.

The gunman is also believed to be behind the killing – with the same gun – of
three paratroopers last week.

One possible angle in the case is that of three paratroopers who were kicked
out of a regiment near Toulouse in 2008 for suspected neo-Nazi activity. One
of the three men has reportedly visited a police station in Toulouse to be
questioned.

He appears to be “someone who is very cold, very determined, very in
control of himself, very cruel,” Mr Gueant said.

Mr Gueant said the video footage was being recorded “either to be watched
or to be broadcast.”

French police have been scouring the internet for the killer’s footage, but Mr
Gueant said no trace had been found by Tuesday morning.

Norwegian investigator Paal-Fredrik Hjort Kraby said on Tuesday that no
Breivik footage had ever been found.

“He intended to film (his killing) but we never found a trace of a camera,”
he said.

Nicolas Sarkozy meanwhile paid homage to the victims at a minute’s silence in
Paris, and afterwards admitted authorities did not yet know the identity or
motivations of the killer.

“Anti-Semitism is obvious. The Jewish school attack was an anti-Semitic
crime,” he said.

“But the soldiers? Was it because they were back from Afghanistan? Was it
because they were from minorities? We don’t know,” he said. “We
must be very cautious until we have arrested someone.”

Teacher Jonathan Sandler, 30, and his two sons Arieh, 5, and Gabriel, 4, were
shot dead in the street. The killer then ran onto the grounds and shot
Miriam Monsonego, the seven-year-old daughter of the school director.

“When you grab a little girl to put a bullet in her head, without leaving
her any chance, you’re a monster. An anti-Semitic monster, but first of all
a monster,” Mr Sarkozy said.

“Civilisation cannot guard us from the madness of certain men, from the
barbarism of certain men. What strikes me most is the coldness with which he
acted.”

Source: AFP

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