The 29-year-old will serve a minimum of 46 years for the murder of six people in Melbourne on 20 January 2017

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

Melbourne’s Bourke Street killer James Gargasoulas has been jailed for life for committing one of Australia’s “worst examples of mass murder”.

Gargasoulas, 29, was emotionless as he was sentenced in Victoria’s supreme court on Friday to spend at least 46 years in jail for his deadly driving crimes.

Family of the victims filled the courtroom for Justice Mark Weinberg’s ruling, which comes more than two years after the massacre.

“This was one of the worst examples of mass murder in Australian history,” the judge said.

James Gargasoulas found guilty on six counts of murder in Bourke Street massacre Read more

In one of the city’s darkest days, Gargasoulas used a stolen car to mow down and kill six people in the busy Bourke Street mall on 20 January 2017.

His victims included three-month-old baby Zachary Bryant, who was thrown 60 metres from his pram, and a 10-year-old girl Thalia Hakin. Gargasoulas injured dozens of others, knocking them to the ground and into walls while driving in a drug-induced psychosis.

“The horror of what you did has profoundly impacted the lives of those who were present that day,” Justice Weinberg said, noting in detail the events of the “terrifying rampage” which caused death, broken bones, head injuries and other serious damage.

Grieving relatives recently told the court of their pain, with the brother of Japanese victim Yosuke Kanno saying he will “continue suffering from this until I die”.

Bourke Street deaths: James Gargasoulas found fit to stand trial for murder Read more

Robyn Davis, the mother of victim Jess Mudie, said her daughter died three weeks before her 23rd birthday.

“Never in my wildest nightmares did I think I would have to bury one of my precious children,” she told a plea hearing in January.

In a letter read to the court, Gargasoulas insisted he was not evil and blamed “government oppression” for the murders.

He also maintained he was the Messiah and acted on the wishes of God on the day of the rampage, but said he was in a “bad headspace”.

Gargasoulas pleaded not guilty to killing Zachary, Thalia, Ms Mudie, Mr Kanno, 25, Matthew Si, 33, and Bhavita Patel, 33.

But in November it took a jury less than an hour to unanimously find him guilty of the six murders and 27 counts of reckless conduct endangering life.

An earlier jury found Gargasoulas, who suffers treatment-resistant paranoid schizophrenia, was fit to stand trial.