New Zealand mosque shooter tells court mental health forced him to plead guilty


Brenton Tarrant, the gunman who shot and killed worshippers in the Christchurch mosque attacks, listens as Crown prosecutor Mark Zarifeh delivers his submission during Tarrant's sentencing at the High Court in Christchurch, New Zealand, August 27, 2020. John Kirk-Anderson/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Feb 9 (Reuters) - A white supremacist ‌who killed 51 Muslim worshippers at two mosques in New Zealand seven years ago said on Monday that he ‌was irrational when he pleaded guilty, local media reported, as he sought to overturn his conviction in ‌a New Zealand court.

Brenton Tarrant, 35, appeared in a court in Wellington via a video link, and gave evidence as he sought to overturn his guilty pleas and face a trial.

Tarrant, an Australian national, opened fire on two mosques in Christchurch in March 2019 during Friday prayers in the deadliest mass ‍shooting in New Zealand's history. He used military-style semi-automatic weapons and livestreamed the ‍killings on Facebook with a head-mounted camera.

Tarrant initially ‌denied all charges and was preparing to stand trial but entered guilty pleas a year later to 51 charges of murder, ‍40 ​counts of attempted murder and one charge of committing a terrorist act.

Tarrant told the court that harsh prison conditions had deteriorated his mental health while he was awaiting trial, and that he was essentially not fit to plead guilty, ⁠according to a report in the New Zealand Herald.

"I did not have ‌the mind frameor mental health required to be making informed decisions at that time," Tarrant said.

"I think the issue is, did I really know what ⁠I wanted to do ‍or what would be a good idea? No, I didn't actually ... I was making choices, but they were not choices made voluntarily and they were not choices made rationally due to the (prison) conditions."

Counsel acting for Tarrant have their names and identities suppressed by order of the Court ‍and could not be reached for comment.

A court document showed the Court ‌of Appeal would check if Tarrant was incapable of making rational decisions when he entered his guilty pleas "as a result of the conditions of his imprisonment, which he says were torturous and inhumane".

He is serving a life sentence in prison without parole - the first time a New Zealand court imposed a sentence requiring a person to spend the rest of their life in prison.

The appeal hearing is set down for five days, and is expected to finish on Friday.

If the appeal court declines to grant the application to vacate the guilty pleas, a hearing later in the year will consider the appeal on his sentence. If the ‌charges are overturned, the case will be sent back to the High Court for Tarrant to stand trial on the charges.

Families of some victims assembled at the Wellington court to watch Tarrant give evidence, which lasted for several hours.

"It's really annoying because he's trying to play with all of ​us and this is, it's just a waste of our time and waste of taxpayers money and he just wants to play with us," Rashid Omar, whose son Tariq was killed in the Christchurch shooting, told state broadcaster TVNZ.

(Reporting by Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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