SP
BravenNow
New charges for son of Norway's crown princess on trial for rape
| United Kingdom | general | ✓ Verified - bbc.com

New charges for son of Norway's crown princess on trial for rape

📖 Full Retelling

Marius Borg Høiby now faces a total of 40 charges at his trial and denies the most serious allegations.

Entity Intersection Graph

No entity connections available yet for this article.

}
Original Source
New charges for son of Norway's crown princess on trial for rape 29 minutes ago Share Save Paul Kirby Europe digital editor Share Save Prosecutors in Norway have charged the son of Norway's crown princess with reckless behaviour and violating a restraining order a month after he went on trial for rape and dozens of other alleged offences. Marius Borg Høiby was arrested the day before his trial began at the start of February, on suspicion of threats and violence against a woman in his flat in Oslo. Police remanded him in custody for the first four weeks of the trial. Although allegations of bodily harm and knife threats have been dropped, prosecutors say the 29-year-old has admitted reckless behaviour and violating a restraining order. He now faces a total of 40 charges and denies the most serious allegations. Marius Borg Høiby is the son of Crown Princess Mette-Marit and grew up in the royal family, but he is not a member of Norway's royal house. He was four when his mother married Crown-Prince Haakon in 2001. He has admitted some of the 40 charges against him, but denies four counts of rape which all involve a woman who was either asleep or incapacitated after they had had intercourse. The latest charges against him relate to a woman from the upmarket Frogner area of Oslo, who he was banned from contacting at the time. He already admitted violating a restraining order relating to the same woman at the start of the trial and partially admits other allegations that date back to 2024. Marius Borg Høiby was first arrested after a violent incident at the woman's Frogner flat, and spoke at the time of suffering from mental issues for years. Although it is unusual for further charges to be added during a trial, state prosecutor Sturla Henriksbø explained that this was possible if the defendant admitted the offences. Reckless behaviour can command a jail term of up to two years in prison. By Tuesday the trial at Oslo District Court was 17 days into the 28 days allocated fo...
Read full article at source

Source

bbc.com

More from United Kingdom

News from Other Countries

🇺🇸 USA

🇺🇦 Ukraine