First half of the article translated by Google:

Crown Princess Mette-Marit was notified by the Palace that her son was going to be arrested. Then she called Marius and turned up at his home to clean before the police arrived.

Communications manager Guri Ofstad Varpe at the Royal Court confirms to VG that it was the Palace that informed Mette-Marit about the arrest of Marius Borg Høiby. They had received a message from the police.

"The police notified the Royal Court and the Royal Court then informed the Crown Prince couple about an incident involving Marius Borg Høiby and about a possible arrest. As is known, the police also notified Marius Borg Høiby ahead of the arrest. The police chose not to make an arrest in his residence, and have never searched it," she told  VG

Thus, the Royal Court says that the police have never searched Marius's house inside the royal property. This is despite the fact that a SIM card was removed from his mobile, and according to what Se og Hør has learned, has not been resolved.

As is well known, Marius handed over a broken mobile phone to the police. Where the evidence went, no one knows…

The second half talks about how they think Mette-Marit drove Marius to his arrest and potentially cleaned his apartment but none of that is confirmed.

Posted by ButIDigress79

8 comments
  1. This is nothing but constant cover-ups and the norvegian public seems to not act on it.

  2. Would love to hear how Norwegian public feel about this? There seems to be established pattern of cover ups.

  3. Girl, let that boy face some consequences. It’s obvious the police are on his side, he’ll be fine 🙄

  4. Poor King Harald, he’s been working so hard all his life committed to his duty. Must be difficult for him to observe this. But his grandchildren seem as solid as him, at least.

  5. Maybe I read this wrong but what they are saying is the police informed the crown princess and Borg rather than the crown princess informing him?

  6. Soooooooo they’re both criminals? Him, obviously. But her for helping him cover up his crimes?

  7. Letting this man face consequences of his own actions would be the best thing to protect Norwegian Monarchy. Yet, I don’t think that will happen.

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