The stepson ‌of Norway’s crown prince Haakon has been found guilty of two counts of rape as well as domestic violence and other crimes and is ‌sentenced to four years in prison, an Oslo court ruled on Monday.Marius Borg Hoiby (29) who joined the royal family when his mother Mette-Marit married ​Haakon in 2001, was acquitted on two other counts of rape.He had pleaded not guilty to the most severe accusations against him, including those of rape, while admitting to some lesser ones, and can appeal the verdict.Prosecutors had asked that Hoiby should be sentenced to seven years and ​seven months of prison.The seven-week trial gripped the Nordic country, detailing Hoiby’s drug addiction, self-made videos of sexual encounters and more than 800 electronic messages ⁠entered into evidence. One alleged rape took place in the basement of the crown prince’s family home, the court ‌heard.[ A princess, her son and a royal scandal: Norway’s trial of the centuryOpens in new window ]Interest in the case was boosted by the contrast between the picture-perfect royal family and Hoiby’s alleged actions as heard in court, said Ketil Raknes, an ⁠associate professor in political communication at the Kristiania University ​of Applied Sciences.The case, alongside other crises, has contributed to ​a decline in the popularity of the royal family.It coincided with crown princess Mette-Marit’s apology for “poor judgment” in maintaining contact ‌with the late US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein ​after he was convicted in 2008.A Norstat survey out on February 21st – during the trial – showed a fall ⁠in the number of Norwegians favouring keeping the monarchy ⁠to a record low ​of 60 per cent, from 70 per cent in January, and a rise to 27 per cent from 19 per cent in those wanting a different system of governance.In May, the royal family recovered somewhat in popularity, with 64 per cent polled by Norstat supporting the monarchy and 23 per cent wanting a different system of governance.“It was ... a perfect crisis for the royal family because they had two crises at the same time. And they had a lot of (criticism) for the way they handled the Epstein files,” Raknes said.The verdict was delivered amid difficult personal circumstances for Mette-Marit, ‌Hoiby’s mother, who this ⁠month was placed on the national lung transplant list as her health has severely deteriorated.She suffers from pulmonary fibrosis, a condition that makes it increasingly difficult to breathe. Without a transplant, she has around a year ‌left to live, her doctors have said.That is somewhat changing people’s perceptions in advance of the verdict, Raknes said.“The coverage is much more sober,” ​he said. “People are seeing: ‘OK, this is a family who’s really struggling and this is ​not the time for ... playing ... the moral card as high as we maybe have done earlier in this case’.” – Reuters (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2026