The Borneo Post

Christchur­ch mosque murderer weighing life-term appeal

-

WELLINGTON: The Christchur­ch mosque attacker is considerin­g appealing his unpreceden­ted whole-of-life jail term, arguing guilty pleas made in the wake of the 2019 shootings were obtained under duress, his lawyer said Monday.

Self-proclaimed white supremacis­t Brenton Tarrant pleaded guilty to 51 charges of murder, 40 of attempted murder and one of terrorism last year.

He was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt without the possibilit­y of parole, the first time a whole-life term has been handed down in New Zealand.

Tarrant did not offer a defence at the time but his lawyer Tony Ellis said the Australian national was questionin­g his decision to plead guilty.

Ellis said the gunman, 31, had told him the pleas were entered under duress because he was subject to "inhuman and degrading treatment" while being held on remand.

"He decided that the simplest way out was to plead guilty," Ellis told Radio New Zealand.

Ellis reportedly took over as Tarrant's lawyer ahead of a coroner's inquiry into the March 2019 shootings and advised his client to exercise his right of appeal. "He was sentenced to over 25 years, that is a sentence of no hope and that's not allowed, that's a breach of the Bill of Rights," Ellis said.

Armed with an arsenal of semiautoma­tic weapons, Tarrant attacked Friday worshipper­s at Christchur­ch's Al Noor mosque first, before moving on to the Linwood prayer centre, livestream­ing the killings as he went. His victims were all Muslim and included children, women and the elderly.

New Zealand does not have the death penalty and in sentencing in August last year, Judge Cameron Mander said he was imposing the harshest possible term for Tarrant's "inhuman" actions.

"Your crimes are so wicked, that even if you are detained until you die it will not exhaust the requiremen­ts of punishment and denunciati­on," Mander said at the time.

Ellis declined to comment when contacted, saying his client had instructed him to speak only to selected local media outlets.

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? Tarrant stands in the dock during his appearance at the Christchur­ch District Court.
— AFP file photo Tarrant stands in the dock during his appearance at the Christchur­ch District Court.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia