Officers describe the moment they arrested mosque terrorist but when will the truth be revealed on who he is and why he did it? The Royal Commission report does not address some of the basic questions that have been asked by those of us accused by NZ Muslims of being involved in this.
Since this attack NZ Muslims have campaigned unceasingly to take away our western cultural freedoms of questioning religious claims of truth, etc. Surely since NZ Muslims hold us accountable for this attack, we have a right to see the evidence against us?
You can view the Royal Commission report from these links:
Tarrant Royal Commission part 1 of 4, Tarrant Royal Commission part 2 of 4, Tarrant Royal Commission part 3 of 4 and Tarrant Royal Commission part 4 of 4.
The only other evidence we have, which seems to be ignored by the Royal Commission, is that Tarrant was one of them: Christchurch gunman prayed in mosque weeks before March 15 shooting is just one example from this site of one of the visits he had previously made to the mosque.
This from stuff.co.nz:
With his rifle trained on the Christchurch mosque terrorist as he lay squirming on the footpath, Senior Constable Scott Carmody noticed the gunman’s hands were moving in his vest.
Worried he may be about to detonate the explosives in his car’s boot or go for a concealed weapon, Carmody considered shooting him.
But worried his bullet might ricochet and injure his colleague, Senior Constable Jim Manning, Carmody took another course of action.
“I reversed my weapon and struck him with the butt, with the intention of rendering him unconscious,” Carmody told police’s Ten One Magazine.
Moments later the pair had arrested the man who was later found responsible for murdering 51 people.
The officers, who have been awarded the New Zealand Bravery Decoration, are among 10 people honoured with an array of bravery awards for their courage and selflessness during the attacks at the two mosques on March 15, 2019.
The two men have spoken about the ordeal for the first time in an interview with police’s Ten One Magazine.
The pair, who had known each other for more than 20 years, were at a firearms training exercise day in Christchurch when the attack unfolded. Armed with police-issue weapons, they decided to check a possible exit from the city that the man might use.
“I was thinking, ‘Some poor New Brighton community cop’s going to be pulling up these guys, and he’s not going to be armed’,” Manning told Ten One.
“We need to go wide because we need to be where the police guns aren’t.”
As they drove east along Brougham St, the gunman was heading in the same direction on a parallel course on Bealey Ave in a Subaru car.
There were reports of a gunman and shooting in Linwood, and shots fired from a car, and then they were confronted with it – bullet holes in the windscreen, hazard lights flashing and coming through a red light in the opposite direction.
Manning turned around and headed towards the terrorist’s car. He said he believed there was a “good likelihood” they would die.