A coroner will examine the patrol and electronic monitoring conditions of Brighton siege terrorist Yacqub Khayre after the violent gunman took the life of a receptionist in 2017 during a shoot-out that ended in his death.

Islamic State supporter Khayre, who had a history of violent crime, was on parole at the time of the shooting but the state’s adult parole board has since revealed they were unaware he was on a terrorist watch list.

Yacqub Khayre was in a program designed to counter Islamic extremism in the six months before the Brighton siege. Credit:AP

It’s likely Coroner Audrey Jamieson will hear from both the adult parole board and the Australian New Zealand Counter Terrorism Committee as well as Victoria Police during her investigation of the circumstances surrounding the two deaths.

During a directions hearing at the Coroner’s Court on Friday, the court heard Khayre, 29, was on parole and subject to electronic monitoring when he shot dead Kai Hao and took a prostitute hostage at the Buckingham International Serviced Apartments in Brighton on June 5, 2017.