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When asked what she was waiting for with Brenton after the mbadacre, she did not hesitate: "He deserves the death sentence for what he's done, and it hurts me to say it because it's family."
"But for someone who ends the lives of so many people, it deserves the same thing," he added.
Meanwhile, Cox recalled that as a child, Brenton was obsessed with weapons and violent video games.
In dialogue with Europa Press, the terrorist's grandmother, Marie Fitzgerald, 81, said she was used to taking care of the accused and her sister when they were kids. He said that Brenton was "a normal kid" who loved video games, but that he never demonstrated that he could do anything like this.
According to Marie, the death of Brenton's father in 2010 caused a break in his personality. Since then, the young man started traveling across Europe: "Since I've traveled abroad, I think this guy has completely changed the boy we met."
The authorities believe that During these trips, the young man forged extremist views and hatred deeply rooted in non-white immigration. Feeling that he even showed when he was brought to court, where he made a supremacist gesture.
"I'm heartbroken, I'm devastated. I hate so much right now. If I saw him, I would hit him in the face as hard as possible "insured Daily Mail Australia a relative of the gunman, under anonymity.
"He was not educated to be racist, no one did it that way", he added.
Meanwhile, Tarrant will be appearing again in the New Zealand High Court on April 5, when further charges should be laid against him.
Relatives and representatives of the Muslim community demand Saturday an acceleration of this delivery to be able to perform funeral rites in accordance with their religion, which sets a time limit of about 24 hours to bury the deceased.
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