WELLINGTON, New Zealand — When the white supremacist who committed New Zealand's deadliest mass shooting pleaded guilty six years ago, it was a relief for his victims and a justice system bracing for a high-profile trial that many feared could provide a platform for his racist views.
Many New Zealanders were determined to forget the face and name of Brenton Tarrant, who murdered 51 Muslim worshippers at two mosques in Christchurch in 2019. But he returned to national headlines this week with a bid in New Zealand's Court of Appeal to recant his guilty pleas.
In the aftermath of Tarrant's hate-fueled massacre, New Zealand sought to curb his influence by banning his racist manifesto and a video of the slaughter that he livestreamed on Facebook in an apparent attempt to perform the hateful crime for an online audience.
Tarrant previously expressed a desire to spread his ideology through the legal process, so it was a surprise in 2020 when he quietly admitted to all of the terrorism, murder and attempted murder charges he faced. Months later he accepted, without opposition, a record sentence of life in prison with no chance of parole.
Now his lawyers argue he made the admissions during a nervous breakdown induced by oppressive prison conditions, which made him temporarily doubt his identity and ideology.
If his bid to discard the guilty pleas is successful, the man described by one of his lawyers Thursday as ''the most reviled person in New Zealand'' would return to court for a full trial. The prospect is dreaded by his victims and a country that has tried to limit his notoriety.
Killer says his identity collapsed
Appearing from prison by video conference, Tarrant told the appeals court in Wellington he was ''irrational'' when he pleaded guilty and relinquished the opportunity for a trial at which he apparently wanted to mount a racist defense that was invalid under New Zealand law.