In chilling new evidence that reveals the Bondi Beach massacre was a meticulously planned act of terrorism that could have been far worse, Australian police have told a court the attackers first threw homemade pipe bombs and a tennis ball bomb at the crowd, which failed to detonate before they opened fire with their guns.
The revelation, contained in a police fact sheet released Monday, paints a picture of a months-long plot by father-and-son duo Sajid and Naveed Akram, who conducted reconnaissance at the beachside park two days before the December 14 attack on a Jewish Hanukkah celebration. The failed bombs, coupled with a massive arsenal, show the assailants aimed for a catastrophic, multi-pronged assault that killed 15 people and injured dozens but narrowly avoided an even higher death toll.

A Bomb-Maker’s Workshop and a ‘Martyrdom’ Video
Police evidence details a chilling timeline. Just after 2 a.m. on the day of the attack, CCTV captured the men carrying “long and bulky items wrapped in blankets” from a short-term rental in Campsie. Police believe the bundles contained two single-barrel shotguns, a Beretta rifle, three pipe bombs, a tennis ball bomb, and a large improvised explosive device.
At the rental house, investigators later found a bomb-maker’s workshop: 3D-printed parts for a shotgun component, bomb-making equipment, and copies of the Quran. On one of the gunmen’s phones was a video from October showing them sitting before an Islamic State flag, making statements in English condemning Zionists and outlining their motives for the attack.
The new details have ignited a political inferno. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, booed by sections of a massive memorial crowd in Bondi on Sunday, faced the crisis directly on Monday. “As prime minister I feel the weight of responsibility for an atrocity that happened whilst I am prime minister and I am sorry,” he said, as a new poll showed his approval rating had plummeted 15 points to -9 —the lowest since his election.
His government is now scrambling to introduce even tougher laws, including a new offence for adults radicalising children. Meanwhile, the New South Wales parliament was recalled to vote on emergency legislation to cap gun ownership at four firearms per person, ban terror symbols, and give police the power to remove face coverings at protests.
Why the Bombs Change Everything
The failed explosives transform the public understanding of the attack. It was not a spontaneous outburst of gun violence but a sophisticated, premeditated terrorist operation designed to maximize terror and casualties. The fact that the bombs—a classic weapon of insurgency and terror—did not work is a stroke of luck that saved countless lives.
The evidence also underscores a terrifying domestic threat: the attackers trained with firearms in rural New South Wales, owned six registered guns (with one license holder in the state possessing 298), and used easily accessible technology like 3D printing to manufacture weapons parts at home.
For a nation still laying flowers at Bondi, the police report is a grim autopsy of a near-apocalypse. It reveals that the horror Australia witnessed was, in fact, a failed version of an even more horrifying plan—a plan conceived in a suburban rental, blessed by the imagery of a foreign terror cult, and only thwarted by the silent failure of a few homemade bombs.














