The alleged Bondi gunman has lost his court bid to suppress the names and addresses of his mother, brother and sister due to fears over their safety.
Lawyers for Naveed Akram - who is facing 59 charges over December's attack on a Jewish festival on Bondi Beach that killed 15 people - argued that his family could be targeted by vigilantes and had already experienced abuse.
Last month, details of Akram's family were suppressed under an interim order but on Thursday, a Sydney court lifted it after several media outlets opposed the move.
The case had attracted "unprecedented" attention in Australia and globally, the judge ruled, and information about the family was already widely available online.
"This case has unprecedented public interest, outrage, anger and grief," Judge Hugh Donnelly told the court.






