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Report finds security lapses ahead of New Zealand mosque shootings

Police tape blocks off an area where an officer stands guard, the dome of a mosque in the background.
A police officer stands guard in front of the Masjid Al Noor mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand, in March 2019 after a terrorist attack.
(Vincent Yu / Associated Press)
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There were no clear signs that an attack last year on two New Zealand mosques was imminent, but police should have done a better job vetting the lone gunman when he applied for a gun license, and intelligence agencies should have focused more on threats such as white supremacism, according to a new report.

The report, released Tuesday by a Royal Commission of Inquiry, also says that the New Zealand government should establish a new national intelligence agency — one of 44 recommendations contained in the nearly 800-page document.

The commission’s report details how the attacker, white supremacist Brenton Tarrant, was able to live a solitary, almost ghostlike, existence by relying on an inheritance that was fast dwindling when he killed 51 Muslim worshipers in Christchurch on March 15, 2019.

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New Zealand’s intelligence agencies were far too focused on the threat posed by Islamic extremism, which came at the expense of confronting other threats such as white supremacism, the report says.

It found that, despite the shortcomings of various agencies, Tarrant had not told anybody of his plans or left any clues until he posted his bigoted manifesto online just eight minutes before he began shooting. It was too late for agencies to respond.

New Zealand currently has one intelligence agency that focuses on domestic threats and one that focuses on international threats. Often those agencies are focused on immediate events such as keeping visiting dignitaries safe. The report recommends establishing a new, well-financed agency that would be more strategic in nature and would focus on developing a counterterrorism strategy.

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Events this weekend in New Zealand honored the anniversary of the March 15, 2019, massacre when a gunman killed 51 people at two Christchurch mosques.

New Zealand’s liberal prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, said the government had agreed to implement all of the recommendations and apologized for agency shortcomings. Immediately after the attacks, Ardern helped push through new laws banning the deadliest types of semiautomatic weapons.

But conservative opposition leader Judith Collins said the report’s recommendations needed to be scrutinized and that the nation must tread carefully to safeguard rights and liberties.

Abdigani Ali, a spokesperson for the Muslim Assn. of Canterbury, told reporters in Christchurch that his community should have been kept safe.

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“The report shows that institutional prejudice and unconscious bias exists in the government agencies and needs to change,” he said.

The white supremacist who killed 51 worshipers at two New Zealand mosques had intended to burn down the mosques afterward, a prosecutor says in court.

The 30-year-old gunman, who is Australian, was sentenced in August to life in prison without the possibility of parole after pleading guilty to 92 counts of terrorism, murder and attempted murder.

The report details his extensive world travels but also shows that he had almost no meaningful interactions with people in New Zealand because he was introverted and didn’t work.

As a child, Tarrant had unsupervised access to the internet and became interested in video games from the age of 6 or 7, the report says. He began expressing racist ideas from a young age and told his mother he started using the far-right 4chan internet forum from age 14.

He put on a lot of weight as a teenager before starting to exercise compulsively at gyms and going on a diet, losing about 110 pounds. His father, Rodney, was diagnosed with lung cancer caused by exposure to asbestos and in 2010 killed himself at home, leaving an inheritance of about $339,000 to Tarrant.

Moments after dozens of people were shot dead at Al Noor Mosque in New Zealand’s third-largest city, prayers were underway at another mosque to the east, just three miles away.

The gunman worked for about three years as a personal trainer at a gym in the Australian town of Grafton but stopped working after an injury and then used his inheritance to live and travel. He visited dozens of countries around the world, including India, China, Russia, North Korea and many countries in Africa and Europe.

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He moved to New Zealand in 2017 and focused on planning for his attack. The report said he only had superficial interactions with people at a gym and at the rifle club where he practiced rapid-fire shooting. Yet ,when needed, Tarrant could present himself to others in a way that didn’t arouse suspicion.

Tarrant told investigators that although he frequented extreme right-wing discussion boards on websites like 4chan and 8chan, he found YouTube a far more significant source of information and inspiration.

Ardern said she planned to speak to leaders at YouTube about how the gunman had become inspired by videos on the site.

In 2018, Tarrant was treated at Dunedin Hospital for injuries to his right eye and thigh after telling doctors he accidentally fired a gun while cleaning it at his apartment, the report says. He received government compensation for his injury, which wasn’t reported to the police. The hospital registrar said the accident appeared to be careless and “a little unusual” but otherwise didn’t set off alarm bells.

Health authorities also wrote that Tarrant was taking unprescribed steroids and injecting testosterone after he was treated for abdominal pain, but they didn’t report that to the police either.

As part of the process for getting a gun license, Tarrant was required to provide to police the names of two people who could speak to his good character. He gave them the name of a friend he knew mostly online from gaming together, along with that of a friend’s father. Vetting officers interviewed Tarrant and the referees, and recommended that he be given the license.

Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said that in deciding whether Tarrant was “fit and proper” to hold a gun license, “we could have done more to consider whether the two referees knew the individual well enough to serve as referees.”

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