Brenton Tarrant, whose face has been blurred to protect his fair trial rights, smirked as media photographed him when he appeared in the Christchurch District Court.
Accused mosque gunman Brenton Tarrant is under fulltime observation in a specialist facility, Corrections say.
Tarrant is segregated from other prisoners as he waits on remand, after being arrested last week over the terrorist attack on a pair of Christchurch mosques.
Tarrant has been warned he's a marked man in prison.
Gang members gathered at Hagley High School in Christchurch yesterday to take flowers and offer their support to families affected by the tragedy.
They said what Tarrant allegedly carried out was "wrong in every way possible".
Speaking to the Herald, one man said the gang members had gone to the school to tautoko (support) the families.
"Because they've come to New Zealand, they are part of us now. They are our people," he said.
"That stuff that happened [on Friday], that was disgusting, there was no need for it. We're a club, we do our things but, nah, that's just wrong in every way possible."
Another man told the Herald, "we've got friends inside too". He didn't elaborate but the warning was clear.
Criminal justice advocate Sir Kim Workman said he'd heard from an independent source that Tarrant could be in danger in prison.
"That's a matter I'm sure Corrections will be talking about as we speak.
"Those sorts of feelings will run high with the prisons. The only thing that Corrections can do is to segregate them and keep them in separate custodial management regimes."
Tarrant would essentially be kept in solitary confinement for his own safety, Workman said.
That was the system for many other people who could be at risk in prison, including paedophiles, those who committed "particularly horrendous offences", and police officers or others in law enforcement who had been imprisoned themselves.
"In my experience when you have got someone with that sort of profile, they do have contingency plans, certainly in the early stages of the sentence or when they're in remand."
Tarrant would likely be kept in separate facilities with "fairly high security" where no other prisoners would have easy access to him. Prison officers might also be carefully chosen "to make sure that the prison officers aren't likely themselves to be tempted to deal with the prisoner themselves".
Corrections chief custodial officer Neil Beales said Tarrant was being managed "in accordance with the provisions set out in the Corrections Act 2004 and our international obligations for the treatment of prisoners".
"This individual is being held in a specialist security facility, segregated from other prisoners and subject to 24 hour observation."