Gunman ‘faces isolation’ due to prison dangers
CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand: The white-supremacist accused of the Christchurch killings will spend the rest of his life in jail if convicted, likely in isolation for his own safety, a New Zealand criminologist and former convict said yesterday.
Attacks at two mosques in the southern city last Friday left 50 Muslim worshippers dead and sparked global revulsion.
“He is going to be very highly unpopular in a prison where 80 percent ( of inmates) are Maori or Pasifika ( Pacific islanders) and he is a white supremacist,” said Greg Newbold, a professor of criminology at Canterbury University.
“He will have no friends, not even the white guys,” added Newbold, who spent five years in jail on drugs charges – half of that in maximum security – before turning his life around.
New Zealand has no death penalty and alleged shooter Brenton Tarrant, 28, is expected to face a record prison sentence if found guilty of the massacre.
If convicted, he could be sentenced to life imprisonment without parole, criminal lawyer Simon Cullen told AFP, adding that such a sentence would be ‘unprecedented’ for New Zealand.
Newbold said it was possible that Tarrant could spend the rest of his life in ‘segregation’ and at least the first five to ten years in “effective” solitary confinement.
“There’s a lot (of people) in segs who would get at him as well... he would have to be in highlysegregated conditions,” Newbold said.
“If he’s convicted, he will be effectively in solitary for a long, long time... he will be locked up most of the time in his own cell.”
New Zealand’s only maximumsecurity facility is the recently upgraded Auckland Prison at Paremoremo, 25 minutes north of Auckland where the nine-squaremetre concrete block cells have a bed, toilet and shower all visible to staff via cameras.
Tarrant is said to be under 24hour surveillance with no access to newspapers, television or other media.
Authorities say Tarrant is being held in a ‘specialist security facility’ outside of Christchurch until his next court appearance on April 5. — AFP