Alleged Bondi gunmen threw ‘tennis ball bomb’, new documents say

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Alleged Bondi gunmen threw ‘tennis ball bomb’, new documents say


Supplied A man dressed in black and standing in a field of lush grass aims a shotgunSupplied

A screenshot from a video found on Naveed Akram’s phone shows his father conducting firearms training, police allege

The gunmen who allegedly carried out a deadly attack on a Jewish festival at Bondi Beach last week threw four undetonated explosives at the start of the attack, including a “tennis ball bomb”, according to newly released documents.

Naveed Akram, 24, has been charged with dozens of offences including 15 counts of murder over the attack at a Hanukkah celebration on 14 December. Akram, who was shot by police during the attack, was released from hospital on Monday and transferred to a prison.

The second alleged gunman, his father Sajid Akram, was shot dead.

The pair recorded a video manifesto in October in which they sit in front of the Islamic State group flag, according to police documents.

Supplied Grainy footage shows two men coming out of a doorway carrying big unidentifiable objects in their arms.Supplied

A screenshot from CCTV shows the Akrams carrying ‘bulky items’ hours before the attacks, police allege

The Akrams “meticulously planned this terrorist attack for many months”, police alleged. Videos found on Naveed’s phone showed the pair were motivated by “violent extremist ideology” linked to the Islamic State group.

They include one video in which the pair sit in front of an Islamic State flag and detail their motivation for the Bondi attack and condemn “the acts of ‘Zionists'”, police alleged. Naveed also appears to recite a passage from the Quran in Arabic in the video, police alleged.

Another video allegedly showed the pair conducting firearms training in what police believe to be rural New South Wales in October. “The Accused and his father are seen throughout the video firing shotguns and moving in a tactical manner,” police alleged.

A temporary suppression order had been made on the fact sheet last week to protect the identities of the survivors of the attack. The order was revoked on Monday after an application to the New South Wales Local Court by media companies although the names of most survivors were redacted.

Supplied Grainy CCTV footage shows a darkened road with cars and two deckchairs on a balcony in the foregroundSupplied

CCTV shows the Akrams carrying out reconnaissance two days ahead of the Bondi Beach attack, police allege

CCTV recorded at Bondi beach two days ahead of the attack also showed the Akrams driving to the area and carrying out reconnaissance, police alleged.

“The Accused and his father, S Akram, are seen to exit the vehicle and walk along the footbridge, being the same position where they attended two days later and shot at members of the public,” police wrote.

CCTV also captured the pair leaving rented accommodation in the Sydney suburb of Campsie hours before the attack “carrying long and bulky items wrapped in blankets”, police alleged.

Police said the items, which were placed in a car, were three firearms, home-made improvised explosive devices including the “tennis ball bomb” and two Islamic State flags.

They later drove to Bondi where they parked and placed the flags on the inside of the front and rear windows, police alleged. After removing the firearms and homemade bombs from the car, they walked towards the footbridge from where they carried out their attack, police alleged.

Three homemade pipe bombs and the tennis ball bomb were thrown as they approached the bridge, police alleged, but did not explode although they were assessed as “viable”. A fifth explosive device was later found in their vehicle, police had previously said.

Naveed Akram, who was shot in the abdomen and critically injured by police, did not appear at Monday’s court appearing.

Supplied A grainy image shows a white package with red wires coming out of it in the boot of a carSupplied

Police allege a homemade bomb was found in the boot of the Akrams’ vehicle


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