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Martin John Bryant (born 7 May 1967) is an Australian mass murderer [1] who shot and killed thirty-five people and injured twenty-three others in the Port Arthur massacre on 28 and 29 April 1996. [2] He is currently serving thirty-five life sentences , and 135 years without the possibility of parole , at Risdon Prison in Hobart , Tasmania .
Bryant's suspected motivations for the massacre were the refusal of the sale of Seascape by owners David and Noelene Martin and to become notorious, as revealed by his lawyer, on the Channel 7 program Sunday Night, air date Sunday, 6 March 2016. From the moment he was captured, he continually wanted to know how many people he had killed and ...
Walter Mikac AM (born 29 April 1962) is an Australian pharmacist who became widely known as a political activist in the aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre, where his wife Nanette Mikac (née Moulton) and daughters, six-year-old Alannah Mikac and three-year-old Madeline Mikac were among 35 people killed by Martin Bryant on 28 April 1996.
Bryant felt good about Monday's season opener right up until it didn't. What went wrong? That's what the Bulldogs were trying to find out.
What did Thomas Bryant, Caleb Martin, ... Martin’s return is now considered unlikely. Martin, who turns 29 on Sept. 28, averaged career highs in points (10 per game) and assists (2.2 per game ...
John William Avery (born 11 July 1948) is an Australian former barrister based in Hobart, Tasmania.Avery notably represented the perpetrator of the Port Arthur Massacre, Martin Bryant during pre-trial and sentencing proceedings before the Supreme Court of Tasmania in 1996, [1] before himself being sentenced in the same court for misappropriation and stealing from clients of his firm in 2008.
The men who killed Emmett Till: J.W. Milam, center, and Roy Bryant, right, with their attorney, Sidney Carlton. getty images The air outside felt chilly as the crowd came inside to find their seats.
Nitram is a 2021 Australian biographical psychological drama film directed by Justin Kurzel from a screenplay by Shaun Grant. [3] The film revolves around the life and behaviors of a mentally distressed young man called "Nitram" (based on Martin Bryant), and the events leading to his involvement in the 1996 Port Arthur massacre in Tasmania.