An Australian man, Martin Thomas Glynn, was charged after allegedly posting a message on social media supporting the Bondi Beach mass shooting. Photo / Getty Images
An Australian man, Martin Thomas Glynn, was charged after allegedly posting a message on social media supporting the Bondi Beach mass shooting. Photo / Getty Images
An Australian man has been charged and detained after allegedly posting a message on social media backing the mass shooting on Bondi Beach.
A court in Western Australia heard that police found six licensed firearms, 4000 rounds of unsecured ammunition, and anti-Semitic material in his home, local media said.
Detectivesraided the suspect’s home on Tuesday, Western Australia police said in a statement.
He was charged with intent to racially harass, carrying or possessing a prohibited weapon, and failing to properly store a firearm or related material.
The suspect, named in local media as 39-year-old Perth man Martin Thomas Glynn, appeared in Fremantle Magistrates Court yesterday.
In a social media post, he allegedly expressed “100% support” for the December 14 mass shooting at a Jewish festival on Bondi Beach, which killed 15 people, media reports said.
Glynn reportedly told the court he did not intend to harm anyone and was trying to contrast the Bondi attack with the deaths of Palestinians in Gaza.
He was remanded in custody until his next court hearing in February, local media said.