Breivik and his mother Wenche Behring Breivik met earlier this month at Ila Prison where Breivik is being held, his lawyer Tord Jordet said today.
She died on Friday after a long illness, according to her lawyer Ragnhild Torgersen. She was 66.
A murderer's llament: Anders Behring Breivik,
seen here making a salute at his trial in Oslo, is pleading to be let
out of jail to attend his mother's funeral
Breivik and Mr Jordet also discussed whether the confessed mass murder would like to attend her funeral.
'He would like to do so but it is up to the prison (board) to decide,' Mr Jordet said.
Chilling: Anders Behring Breivik walks with a gun in hand among bodies on Utoeya island July 22, last year
Terror: Teenagers on the Norwegian holiday
island of Utoya had to 'swim for their lives' and hide in trees when
Breivik fired indiscriminately at them
Five years before the massacre, Breivik had moved back to live with his mother and ended all social contacts.
His mother never attended Breivik's 10-week trial for health reasons, but in a statement read in court she said Breivik had fabricated information.
Breivik and his mother had telephone contacts in recent months because she was not able to visit him in prison for health reasons, Mr Jordet said.
Carnage: A man lies injured in the road amid wreckage from the Oslo blast as emergency service personnel rush to help him
Last year, the Oslo District Court found Breivik guilty of terrorism and premeditated murder for the attacks. He was given a 21-year prison sentence that can be extended if he's considered a threat.
The self-styled anti-Muslim militant denied criminal guilt, saying he's a commander of a resistance movement aiming to overthrow European governments and replace them with 'patriotic' regimes that will deport Muslim immigrants.
Police said they found no evidence of Breivik belonging to any such group.
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