Olympic champ Ingebrigtsen's father acquitted of abusing son
FILES) Norwegian athlete Jakob Ingebrigtsen (C) stands next to his lawyers Mette Yvonne Larsen (L) and Veslemøy Aga (R) at the South Rogaland District Court during the criminal case against Gjert Arne Ingebrigtsen (not in picture), former athletics coach of his children, on March 26, 2025 in Sandnes, Norway. A Norwegian court will rule on Monday, June 16, 2025 in the Ingebrigtsen case, in which former coach Gjert Ingebrigtsen is facing charges of parental violence against his son Jakob, an Olympic athletics champion, and his daughter Ingrid. The prosecution requested two and a half years in prison for Ingebrigtsen senior, while the defence pleaded acquittal at the end of a lengthy trial held before the Sandnes court. (Photo by Lise Åserud / NTB / AFP) / NORWAY OUT
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A Norway court on Monday acquitted Gjert Ingebrigtsen of
abusing his son, Olympic champion runner Jakob Ingebrigtsen, but convicted him
and handed him a 15-day suspended sentence for assaulting his daughter on one
occasion.
Gjert Ingebrigtsen, 59, acted as trainer until 2022 to Jakob,
24, who won Olympic golds in the 5,000m in Paris in 2024 and the 1,500m in
Tokyo in 2021.
He was accused of physical and psychological violence
against Jakob and his sister Ingrid, 19, between 2008 and 2022, but denied the
charges.
At the conclusion of the lengthy trial that lasted from
March 24 to May 15 at the Sandnes court, he was acquitted of the abuse alleged
by Jakob.
The court however found him guilty of one violent incident
involving his daughter Ingrid.
In her testimony, Ingrid told the court her father hit her
in the face with a wet towel in January 2022 - a picture taken that day showed
her with a red cheek.
He said he was aiming for her finger, which she was pointing
at him during a row.
In addition to a 15-day suspended prison sentence,
Ingebrigtsen Sr was ordered to pay Ingrid 10,000 kroner ($1,000) in damages.
Prosecutors had called for him to be jailed for two and a
half years,
"They didn't say they were disappointed. They said they
were surprised," Mette Yvonne Larsen, Jakob's and Ingrid's lawyer, told
reporters when describing her clients' reactions to the verdict.
Meanwhile, the accused's lawyers noted that "what was
decisive for the court's conclusion was the lack of evidence proving that Gjert
Ingebrigtsen had instilled constant fear in his children."
"The court specifically highlighted that several close
family members as well as external witnesses had neither observed nor witnessed
mistreatment," they said in a statement.
'Character
assassination'
Throughout the trial, Jakob referred to his father as
"the accused" and told the court he stopped calling him
"dad" at the age of 11 or 12.
"My upbringing was very much characterised by
fear," he told the court.
"I felt like I had no free choice and I wasn't allowed
to speak my mind. Everything was controlled and decided for me. An enormous amount
of manipulation," he said.
He recounted several episodes of physical violence, including
slaps and kicks to the stomach, some of which occurred when he was seven years
old.
Ingebrigtsen Sr has called the trial a "textbook case
of character assassination".
He told the court he had been an "overly
protective" father who had given his seven children a "traditional
and patriarchal" upbringing.
He was keen to contribute to their success but received only
ingratitude in return, he said.
Jakob and two of his brothers, Henrik and Filip, who are
also athletes, shocked Norway in October 2023 when they used a newspaper
article to accuse their father of using physical violence during their
upbringing.
The police investigated claims about all seven Ingebrigtsen
siblings but retained only those relating to Jakob and Ingrid.
Jakob - who claimed the 1,500m and 3,000m world indoor
titles right before the opening of the trial in March -- along with Henrik and
Filip cut ties with their father in 2022.
On the final day of the trial, Jakob told the court the
proceedings had "profound and heartbreaking onsequences" for the siblings
regardless of the verdict.
"We have known that from the beginning, but it was
nonetheless important to tell our story," he said.


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