Ardern takes authority over Iran, Tarrant says his pleas were obtained under duress

Tarrant claims his pleas were obtained under duress

While Brenton Tarrant claims his pleas were obtained under duress, we still all want to know what the message was that Gamal Fouda preached the last time Tarrant visited his mosque that made him return with a gun. Was this “brother”, clearly familiar with Islamic life and culture, triggered by something Gamal said? Or was it the Dunedin mosque video as Tarrant had claimed?

To be very clear, Islam is only an ideology and not to be fought physically. Education neutralises this deadly ideology. Many Muslims will admit the Saudi’s, still committing the genocide in Yemen that saw a couple of Christchurch mosque recruits killed, are wrong, but Christians in this country have failed to preach the historical truth.

Tarrant claims his pleas were obtained under duress

This from stuff.co.nz:

The gunman who killed 51 people at two Christchurch mosques says his guilty pleas were obtained under duress due to mistreatment in custody, according to a memorandum from his lawyer.

Human rights law specialist Tony Ellis said he expected the gunman, Brenton Tarrant,? to file an appeal against his convictions relating to New Zealand’s worst mass shooting.

Tarrant pleaded guilty in March 2020 to 51 charges of murder, 40 charges of attempted murder, and one of engaging in a terrorist act resulting from the March 15, 2019, attacks on Al Noor and Linwood mosques in Christchurch.

He was sentenced to life in jail, without the possibility of parole, and is being held in a unit for prisoners of exceptional risk at Auckland Prison.

The offender told Ellis that his guilty pleas were obtained under duress, or in breach of the right not to be subjected to torture or cruel treatment. He had given Ellis about 15 pages of detailed description of the mistreatment.

“By this, he means he was subject to inhuman or degrading treatment whilst on remand, which prevented a fair trial,” Ellis wrote last week in a memorandum to the Chief Coroner, Judge Deborah Marshall?.

Ellis wrote that he was “conscious of the major distress such an exercise of his right to appeal” could have on the victims’ families, and society in general.

However, every accused or convicted person was entitled to exercise his right of access to the court, Ellis said in the memo to the coroner. Under the New Zealand Bill of Rights, everyone was entitled to be treated fairly and with dignity and respect, including the gunman, he said.

The law still required people convicted of serious crimes to be treated humanely and, in a civilised society like New Zealand, we should all expect that, Ellis said.

In a written response to Ellis’s memorandum, Judge Marshall, the chief coroner, said that the convicted terrorist would have an opportunity to be heard next month during a hearing about the scope of the coronial inquiry into the shootings, “just like all interested parties.”

As well as raising the possibility of an appeal, Ellis objected to the process of the coroner’s inquiry into the mosque deaths, with the possibility that court action may delay the inquests.

Ellis said he had learned that the coroner sent four letters to the offender in jail, but these were not delivered. The coroner’s process treats the offender as an “interested party”.

The letters said that coroner Brigitte Windley would be looking at the causes and circumstances of the deaths in the mosque attacks.

The chief coroner wrote in a response to Ellis that she had been writing to the offender directly as she was not aware that he had legal representation.

Prison authorities have also stopped the offender from receiving copies of the Royal Commission of Inquiry report into the terrorist attack on the mosques – one copy sent by the Department of Internal Affairs, and the other by Ellis – according to the lawyer.

Without access to the inquiry report, the convicted terrorist was unable to properly instruct his lawyer, and the coroner’s inquiry might have to be delayed while that was sorted out, Ellis said in the interview.

Ellis said that it looked like the Corrections Department was deliberately preventing him from participating in the coroner’s inquiry.

Ellis complained the Chief Coroner repeatedly describing the offender as “the individual” – also used in the Royal Commission of Inquiry report – rather than using the offender’s name, was a serious breach of human rights and “deeply offensive and unlawful”.

The removal or his name attempted to render the offender a non-person, and was not equal protection and equal treatment before the law, Ellis said.

Ellis referred to Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s statement that she would not speak the name of the gunman.

“Politics are fine for the Prime Minister, especially in times of national tragedy, but the Chief Coroner is a judicial officer, and there is no place for a judicial officer to engage in politics, especially politics that demean,” Ellis wrote.

He asked the Chief Coroner to apologise for omitting the convicted terrorist’s name and suggested court action could be taken to have a judge review “the offensive terminology” of using the phrase “the individual.”

In her letter, Judge Marshall disagreed that the use of what she called a “prescribed term” was a serious breach of his human rights or relevant to the scope of the inquiry.

The next step in the coroner’s inquiry is a hearing about its scope in mid-December. Marshall said Ellis was welcome to make written submissions or attend a videoconference on his client’s behalf.

One comment

  1. Thanks.
    Now for myself this raises questions as muslims stated I was there also my name is mentioned within the inquiry.
    This ‘left field’ attack had myself scapegoated along with multiple cts of mistreatment and at least half dozen human rights breeches by the same dept of corruptions,via govt interference.

    I’m not surprised in reading that Mr Brenton Tarrent received the same ‘duty of care’.

    Warmest regards Phil Arps
    Beneficial Insulation Installs Guaranteed

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