GORGOROTH Singer's Appeal Case Begins
Band News
Gaahl's appeal case began last week in connection with the 18-month sentence he received last May
GORGOROTH frontman Gaahl's appeal case began
last week in connection with the 18-month sentence he received last May
for beating a 41-year-old man in what the victim called a ritual attack.
The
29-year-old black metal vocalist, who has several prior convictions,
including one for assault and battery, was sentenced at Sunnfjord court
in Forde, Norway. In addition to the prison term, Gaahl was ordered to pay 100,000 NOK (approximately $15,800) in damages to the victim.
In the court of appeals last Wednesday (Feb. 16), Gaahl explained that he was attacked by the 41-year-old man without provocation.
"He grabbed me and started banging me against the wall," the 29-year-old explained.
The accused claims that he cannot remember everything that happened the night that the fight took place.
"The
last thing I remember before everything turned black is that I was
lying on a sofa trying to protect myself from his punches," Gaahl said. "When I came to my senses again, I was standing on the floor while he was sitting on a chair bleeding."
Gaahl
says that he does not remember using any violence and cannot tell what
happened from the time he was lying on a sofa until he regained
consciousness.
"I was standing on the floor, so I must have defended myself without being able to say how," Gaahl said.
The
41-year-old victim, whose identity hasn't been revealed, was hit and
kicked several times in the face and head and needed stitches to close
cuts in his head. His nose was broken and he suffered major dental
damage.
Speaking to the U.K.'s Metal Hammer magazine last spring, Gaahl
shed light on details overlooked by the police โ something he believes
to be the key factor in the comparatively short sentence.
"He left a weapon in my house that has my blood on it," Gaahl
said. "The police picked up the object but they didn't run any tests to
check out whose blood it was. On the first day of the trial, the judge
mentioned that I could get anything up to 12 years, but in the end, the
prosecution requested 18 months. This is a strong piece of evidence
that I will use of the appeal.
"If the appeal does not work, I
will have to go to prison for 11 months, 'cause I've already served
some of it last year, but it could take one to three years before it
happens anyway, because there is a long waiting list for prisons in
Norway."