The ABC’s investigative program Four Corners is airing 'Path to Terror' on Monday night, looking into the Bondi beach shooting and possible intelligence failures before the attack on 14 December. This comes despite ASIO's rare public statement saying the episode has “significant errors of fact.” The program tracks the radicalisation of Sajid and Naveed Akram, the father and son accused in the antisemitic attack. ASIO said it had not seen the episode but responded to ABC’s detailed questions beforehand. They denied claims that Sajid was part of a group planning a pro-Islamic State community in Türkiye and that Naveed was a “close associate” of terrorists. The agency warned: “If the ABC chooses to publish claims it cannot substantiate – particularly ones it has been told are untrue – we will reserve our right to take further action.” The ABC confirmed ASIO’s statement would not stop the 8:30 pm broadcast. An ABC spokesperson said the seven-week investigation was “comprehensive” and based on many sources, offering a full picture of the Akrams’ actions and ties prior to the attack. Reporter Sean Rubinsztein-Dunlop revealed new information on their links to an Islamic State network in Sydney and questioned whether ASIO’s 2019 decision that 17-year-old Naveed was not an ongoing threat was the right call. ASIO had assessed Naveed in October 2019 but concluded he was not a threat. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said after the attack there were clearly issues with intelligence systems and stressed the need to review the situation from 2019. "We need to examine exactly the way that systems work," he said. 'Path to Terror' is the second part of a series on the Bondi massacre. Last week, journalist Mark Willacy detailed the attack’s minute-by-minute timeline. ABC’s managing director Hugh Marks will face Senate estimates on Tuesday, where ASIO's intervention ahead of the broadcast will likely be discussed.