“Hasn’t the horse already bolted on that?” he asked.
A lawyer for News Corp Australia – which owns Sky News Australia and numerous prominent newspapers – present at the hearing at the Downing Centre Local Court said the company would likely challenge the order. The matter is due to return to court briefly next week.
Akram’s mother spoke to media in the aftermath of the shooting to defend her son.
His father, Sajid Akram, was shot and killed in a shootout with police at the scene of the attack.
Naveed Akram, who was critically injured, has yet to enter a plea. He said only one word when he appeared in court for the first time last month, answering “yeah” when asked if he had heard a discussion about an extension of different suppression orders.
Prosecutors have alleged that the two gunmen, inspired by Islamic State, acted alone and were not part of a wider cell. The attack was Australia’s worst mass shooting since the 1996 Port Arthur attack.