
Father and son the first Christchurch victims laid to rest after attack.( AP: Mark Baker) The risks of sharing information about terrorism More on this story: He was committed to stand trial in May next year.Information about the identity of the Christchurch gunman was easy to find online and has been published by some media organisations. Tarrant last week pleaded not guilty to terrorism charges, as well as 51 counts of murder and 40 of attempted murder. Shanks also outlawed publication of the rambling "manifesto" the shooter posted online before the attacks, saying it was intended to inspire "murder and terrorism".Īrps, a self-described white supremacist, was convicted in 2016 of offensive behaviour for leaving a pig's head at the Al Noor mosque, one of those that was targeted in the mass shooting, Newshub reported. New Zealand's chief censor David Shanks classified the video from the mosque shooting as objectionable content soon after the shooting, making sharing the footage a crime punishable by up to 14 years in jail. O'Driscoll found that Arps had set out to "glorify" the deaths of Muslims and any punishment other than imprisonment was inappropriate, Radio New Zealand reported.

He said it was "particularly cruel" to share the video in the days after the attacks, when relatives were still waiting to hear news of their loved ones.

"This was in effect a hate crime against the Muslim community," judge Stephen O'Driscoll said. Philip Arps, 44, was arrested in Christchurch four days after alleged gunman Brenton Tarrant's March 15 rampage at two mosques in the South Island city resulted in the worst massacre in modern New Zealand history.Īrps pleaded guilty to two charges of distributing objectionable material for sharing footage that was livestreamed to social media during the attack.Ĭhristchurch District Court heard Arps distributed the raw footage to about 30 people and had another version that was modified to include crosshairs and a "kill count", the New Zealand Herald reported. A New Zealand man was jailed for 21 months on Tuesday for distributing gruesome livestream video of the Christchurch mosque attacks that killed 51 Muslim worshippers, local media reported.
