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Alleged New Zealand shooter charged with 49 more counts of murder

The Australian man accused of killing 50 worshippers at two mosques in New Zealand is facing an additional 49 murder charges.Brenton Tarrant, 28,appeared in court in Christchurch Friday and was ordered to undergo a mental assessment to determine his fitness for trial over the attacks.

Brenton Tarrant also faces 39 charges of attempted murder

Flowers lay at a memorial near the Masjid Al-Noor mosque for victims in the March 15 shooting in Christchurch, New Zealand. (Vincent Yu/Associated Press)

The Australian man accused of killing 50 worshippers at two mosques in New Zealand is facing an additional 49 murder charges.Brenton Tarrant, 28,appeared in court in Christchurch Friday and was ordered to undergo a mental assessment to determine his fitness for trial over the attacks.

In an attack broadcast live on Facebook, a lone gunman armed with semi-automatic weapons targeted Muslims attending Friday prayers in Christchurch on March 15.

Tarrantwas charged with one murder the day after the attack and was remanded without a plea. In Christchurch's High Court, where he appeared by video link, 39 extra attempted murder charges werefiled along with the 49 new murder charges. Hewas not required to enter a plea.

Justice Cameron Mander remanded Tarrant in custody until June 14 and ordered he undergo a mental assessment to determine whether he was fit for trial.

Brian Tarrant, 28, seen in court March 16, now faces 50 charges of murder. (Reuters)

Auckland lawyer Shane Tait said in a statement on his website that he and another Auckland attorneywill represent Tarrant.

Media had reported that Tarrant wished to represent himself and legal experts have said he may try to use the hearings as a platform to present his ideology and beliefs.

On Thursday,German police saidTarrant sent money to a French far-right group.

The Federal Criminal Police Office said it briefed lawmakers on its investigation into ties the alleged Christchurch mosque attacker had to Germany, including buying a ticket to Neuschwanstein Castle last November.

The closed-doors briefing also covered money that Tarrant transferred to the Generation Identity group in France.

Federal police declined to elaborate. But the German news agency Deutsche Presse-Agentur(DPA)reported the suspect transferred 2,200 euros ($3,200) in September 2017.

Austrian authorities say Tarrant also donated 1,500 euros ($2,200) to Generation Identity's sister organization, the Identitarian Movement of Austria.

Corrections

  • A subheadline on an earlier version of this story said the accused New Zealand mosque shooter is facing an additional 49 attempted murder charges. In fact, he faces 39 attempted murder charges.
    Apr 04, 2019 10:40 PM ET

With files from Reuters