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The Bikie Wars

I know I'm chiming in late, but I can also confirm the presence of machine guns in Western Sydney. A bloke I knew (he is now in jail for a while) got caught with AK-47 ammo. The police never found a gun though.

OND43X, I'm in Sydney's Hills District, and it is far from quiet here. There may not be any more news reports, but the bikies are very much making their presence known. Over the past 2 months or so, I have had a mate kidnapped and bashed, several friends bashed and had their houses robbed, and the latest I heard of, was a pigs head being left on the door step of my mates girlfriends house.

Everyone around here has a rough idea who it is, as they constantly flaunt their colours at the local shopping center (even when they're by themselves), even though they have only recently patched up.
 
And also

Coffin Cheaters
Black Ulans
Bros
Club Derose
Cossacks
Descendants
Devil’s Henchmen
Foolish Few
Fourth Reich
Gladiators
God’s Garbage
Highway 61
Highwaymen
Immortals
Iron Horsemen
Life and Death
Mob Shitters
Odins Warriors
Outcasts
Outlaws
Rebels
Renegades
Satan’s Riders
Satan’s Sinners
Satan’s Soldiers
Tramps


I think that's about all of them
even though these mofos would prob beat me to death, i had a bit of a lol moment at the name "God’s Garbage". really cheesy.
 
I thought Notorious were basically bikies without bikes please correct me if I'm wrong or just ignorant. :) Also could not agree more with the statement about shit drugs and QLD, heaps of total shit up here that is way to expensive even if it was good, which it is not. BTW obviously all these early morning posts are not the result of the possible inhalation of dodgy QLD meth-lab fumes or some such.
 
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even though these mofos would prob beat me to death, i had a bit of a lol moment at the name "God’s Garbage". really cheesy.

haha most of them are cheesy as...if they had half a brain between them and the pigs id be super surprised

bikies these days are tattooed up tools good for taking the roids of the street and into their filthy hearts...wanna be badass plastic posers...generalisation oh well

bikies need to lift their fucking game!!! i mean we need them for drugs but they let themselves slip for a good while there...atleast theres decent crystal and md getting around again...flood the market already you fake greedy capitalist wannabes

take your guns to lebanon and leave the drugs here
 
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Outlaw Motorcycle Gang Members and associates remain under the microscope


Outlaw Motorcycle Gang Members and associates remain under the microscope

Gold Coast Police have continued to crack down on criminal activity associated with Outlaw Motorcycle Gang Members and associates with 8 people of interest being arrested in the last week.

Police have preferred 17 charges against those arrested including drug, property and bail offences.

A quantity of amphetamine and a substantial amount of cash has also being seized during police enforcement.

http://mypolice.qld.gov.au/blog/201...s-and-associates-remain-under-the-microscope/
.
 
A couple of years ago I was having a beer in a pub in Brighton Melbourne when suddenly you could hear sirens going off everywhere. Turns out one of the gangland lords had just been gunned down only 2 blocks away outside the front of his mansion.
 
A couple of years ago I was having a beer in a pub in Brighton Melbourne when suddenly you could hear sirens going off everywhere. Turns out one of the gangland lords had just been gunned down only 2 blocks away outside the front of his mansion.

Turns out it was my old lady...She loved her mansion. She also loved a beer like you and never let the truth get in the way of good story.... not that it was a story... RIP MUM.

Seems strange you heard the sirens before the shots!
 
This threads been inactive for awhile, here's acouple incidents that have occurred recently (last few months) here in Sydney.

Second bikie shot in gang war in Sydney
7 NOV 2012, 5:21 PM - SOURCE: AAP

A Sydney shooting in which a man was gunned down may be bikie-related, police say. (AAP)
The Comanchero bikie gang may be at war with itself, Sydney police say, after two members have been shot in three days.
Warring factions in the Comanchero bikie gang may be responsible for two shootings within three days that have left one of their members dead and the other clinging to life.

Police urged calm on Tuesday, saying the community shouldn't fear "open-gang warfare" in the streets of Sydney.

The call came after a 28-year-old man known to police was shot four times in the stomach about 5am (AEDT) in a car park at Rhodes, in the city's northwest.

The wounded man, who police confirmed was a Comanchero member, left a trail of blood as he stumbled 500 metres past Rhodes train station and a childcare centre, calling for help before collapsing in front of a construction site in Rider Boulevard.

"I heard a guy calling out for help," Ashlea Nicholson from an adjacent unit block told reporters.

"Just 'help', over and over. At least 10 times."

A construction worker at the building site said blood was pouring from the man's wounds.

"There was a man on the ground and (he was) screaming," the man, who asked not be named, told AAP.

"Blood was pouring out and he was screaming."

He understood at least one bikie member lived in the unit block next to where the shooting occurred.

Police said the wounded man was alert and talking on his way to surgery at Westmead Hospital, where doctors expected him to survive.

As residents were leaving the area for work, hundreds were arriving in Rhodes to start their work day at the local business centre.

A Comanchero member also working at the construction site did not witness the shooting, but said bikie members congregated in all parts of Sydney.

"I've been a member of the Comancheros for 31 years," the man told AAP.

"They're not bikies," he said about the current members, "They're gangs."

The acting head of the Organised Crime Squad, Arthur Katsogiannis, said police didn't believe a rival club was responsible.

"We believe ... that it is a contained conflict within the Comanchero," acting Detective Chief Superintendent Katsogiannis told reporters in Sydney.

"The important thing for us is to reassure the community that we're not looking at open gang warfare."

On Monday, Comanchero member Faalau Pisu, 23, was shot in the head outside a wedding reception in Canley vale, in Sydney's southwest.

He died hours later in hospital but another Comanchero and an associate of the gang who were also wounded survived the attack.

Police had attended the wedding earlier in the evening as a precaution but left before the shooting, saying the scene seemed peaceful.

In October, Brothers For Life gang member Yehya Amoud, 27 was shot dead in a street in Greenacre but his wounded associate Bassam Hijazi survived.

In August, Roy Yaghi and Jamie Grover, both known to police, were shot dead as they sat in a car at nearby South Wentworthville.

On Wednesday, NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell expressed his "frustration about this violence and these shootings".

Opposition Leader John Robertson said the latest shootings brought the total in Sydney to 124 so far this year, by the opposition's count.


http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/1708821/Second-bikie-shot-in-gang-war-in-Sydney
 
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Bikie gangs blaze foreign trails

December 30, 2012

Expanding overseas ... Australian-based bikie gangs are creating havoc for international authorities.
Australian bikie gangs are aggressively expanding overseas and creating havoc for international authorities who fear violent inter-group conflicts and a boost in drug and arms trafficking.

A memo circulated by the European law enforcement agency Europol said the arrival of the Rebels and the Comancheros is causing tension with established outlaw motorcycle gangs - ''OMCGs'' - in Europe.

The increasing concentration of gangs in Europe had the potential to escalate into extreme violence akin to the Nordic Biker Wars of the 1990s in which 11 people were murdered and 96 were wounded, the extensive briefing warned.

''At present, the majority of violent incidents are reportedly occurring within the context of territorial disputes between different OMCGs, as well as rivalries with local organised criminals and street gangs,'' it said.

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The head of Australia's national anti-bikie taskforce, Detective Superintendent John De Candia, said it was a ''big problem'' for police at home because gangs were opening chapters in strategic locations along drug, arms and human trafficking routes.

''They're not going over there to simply ride their bikes, they're going to open up opportunities to get drugs and firearms back,'' he said.

Gangs are taking advantage of countries with lax laws and easy access to drugs and firearms. Senior members are travelling to Malta, Sweden, Spain, the Netherlands, Britain and Thailand to establish chapters using existing contacts or ''patching over'' clubs.

''They engage and conduct their business just like any other criminal organisation - they look for whatever weaknesses exist in the law enforcement or governments and exploit those through violence and extortion,'' Superintendent De Candia said. One senior NSW officer said police were powerless to stop the spread of gangs overseas.

''There's certainly a network that is expanding and we've got evidence of high-ranking Rebels going overseas to open club chapters,'' the source said. ''But we can't prevent them travelling over there unless they've done something to keep them here.''

The Rebels are thought to have about 1500 members in Australia and dozens are kept busy establishing outposts overseas. The Comancheros have also developed strong ties in Spain. Its former boss relocated there in 2010 and it is believed the alleged drug smuggler Hakan Ayik, who is closely aligned to the gang, has been hiding in Spain since fleeing Australia in 2010 while on bail for importing 224 kilograms of heroin into Sydney.

Ayik has also been accused of setting up a ''super'' drug lab in India.

An associate of his, Hakan Arif, reportedly travelled to Spain this year while on bail for drugs charges.

Europol said the number of bikie gang chapters in Europe had risen at a ''significant rate'' in the past two years with more than 700 chapters.

The arrival of gangs from Canada and the US has added to tensions.

''Merely establishing a chapter on the 'turf' of another OMCG is interpreted as an act of provocation and is likely to result in violent confrontations and retaliation,'' Europol said.

However, a senior member of the Rebels denied the club had an ''expansion plan''. He said members were not necessarily moving overseas, it was more a case of foreigners wanting to join their club.

''Other clubs overseas have got in touch with us and want to patch over, a few blokes have got away cause they like the lifestyle overseas, but really there's no big expansion plan,'' he said.

Even bikies needed a holiday, he said. ''I'm a family man with four kids, we do like to get away sometimes, too. And of course, you want to catch up with your mates if you're overseas.''



Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/national/bikie-gangs-blaze-foreign-trails-20121229-2c07o.html#ixzz2Hv9X7VKQ


http://www.smh.com.au/national/bikie-gangs-blaze-foreign-trails-20121229-2c07o.html
 
Five Sydney shootings in four hours as police probe bikie gang turf war link

April 17, 2012

The home of a high-ranking Hells Angel member and a tattoo parlour also linked to the gang were targeted in shootings across Sydney's west this morning, which police believe is part of a turf war with rival gang the Nomads.
Bullets were fired into two tattoo parlours and houses in four shootings in less than four hours in Sydney's overnight, police said.
A man called police at 6.30am to report a fifth shooting after finding the bullet holes in the front of his house on Grimwood Street, Granville.

A police officer stands in front of two bullet holes - one on the wall near the downpipe on the left, and the other on the top of the fence on the right - outside a house in Harris Street, Merrylands. Photo: Kate Geraghty
Do you know more? Email us, message us on Twitter @smh or text 0424 SMS SMH (+61 424 767 764) with information and images.
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He told police he heard what he thought were gunshots in the area about midnight.
In another shooting about 1am a man wearing dark clothing and a black balaclava fired several shots into Tattoo World on Seven Hills Road, Baulkham Hills.
Tattoo World has links to the Hells Angels motorcycle gang.
The tattoo parlour was shot up early last month, with a man wearing black clothing seen running away after opening fire on a roller shutter door.
It was also the scene of a drive-by shooting in March last year.
Fifteen minutes after this morning's shooting at Tattoo World, shots were fired from a car into a house on Centenary Avenue, Northmead, with bullets smashing through two top-storey bedroom windows and a balcony door.
Five children, aged between three and 14, and two adults were home at the time.
About 2.40am, shots were fired into a house on Harris Street, Merrylands, the home of the gang member, with bullets going into the kitchen.
The three elderly people were home during the drive-by shooting.
Less than two hours later, at 4.25am, shots were fired into Infamous Ink on Pitt Street, Merrylands.
A State Crime Command spokeswoman said police had formed Strike Force Kinnarra to investigate four of the five shootings.
"They'll be specifically looking at the shootings being linked to the Hells Angels and Nomads," the spokeswoman said.
The Northmead shooting is believed to be unrelated.
State Crime Commander, Acting Assistant Commissioner Mal Lanyon, said there was a "wall of silence" about the shootings.
"There are members of the community who have information about these shootings and the people involved," he said in a statement.
"We also know there are members of these groups out there who don't agree with the violence being used.
"I encourage these people to provide that information to police. That information can be provided anonymously.
"There is no doubt that these shootings are all about the conflicting groups sending a message to each other, but they are reckless acts of violence."

Recent Sydney shootings
April 16 - Bullet holes were found in a Mazda CX7 on Driftway Drive, Pemulwuy, and a nearby house. The residents were2, was shot dead in Berkeley, on the south coast, when a gunman on a motorcycle appeared outside his f away and police believed it was a case of mistaken identity.
April 14 -Darko Janceski, 3ather's house. Shots were fired into a townhouse on Chiswick Road, Greenacre.
April 10 - Man found at Guildford Road, Guildford with a gunshot wound to his lower abdomen.
April 9 - Man shot in the shoulder at Bada Bing Nightspot on Darlinghurst Road in Kings Cross.
April 8 - Man shot in the calf in Pendle Hill during party dispute, while another man admitted to Auburn Hospital with a gunshot wound to his leg.
April 6 - Man shot in his legs multiple times at Patten Avenue, Merrylands.
April 4 - Shot fired at a vehicle on Chester Road, Ingleburn. A few hours later, one shot was fired into a Norton Place home in Minto.
April 2 - Man grazed in the neck by bullet at a home on Hawkview Street, Merrylands.
April 1 - Man shot in the leg near Fraser Street, Auburn.
March 28 - Shots fired into a business on Marsh Street, Clyde.
March 21 - Two men shot near Hoxton Park and Banks Roads in Miller.
March 19 - Woman shot in the face at Prairie Vale Road, Bossley Park.
March 16 - Fired bullet casings found at intersection of Salibury Road and Rhodes Avenue in Guildford.
March 13 - Shots fired into a house on Princes Street, Bexley.
March 7 - A man wearing dark clothing and a hoodie was seen running away after shooting bullets into Tattoo World, Baulkham Hills.
February 25 - A man waved two pistols above his head before firing a shot in the air outside Mount Druitt police station. A police officer responded with a single shot, which wounded the man. February 6 - A 29-year-old man was shot three times in the leg on Christian Road, Punchbowl.
February 1 - Two bullets hit Lurnea Public School. Police believe they were stray bullets from a drive-by shooting.
January 26 - Bullets fired into tanning salon, man shot in the leg in Guildford and 18-year-old man shot in the back and treated at Auburn Hospital.
January 17 - Wetherill Park home peppered with bullets.
January 12 - Shots were fired into a house in Weigand Avenue, Bankstown, with a bullet reportedly narrowly missing a baby's cot.
January 11 - Shots were fired between two cars after some kind of altercation at an intersection in Greenfield Park, with several bullets hitting a nearby home.
January 9 - Shots were fired into a house on Marion Street, Auburn, about 9.45pm. Ten minutes later, shots were fired into a house on Fairview Street, Arncliffe. The Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad was investigating whether the shootings were linked to drug dealing in the St George area.
January 6 - A man suffered two gunshot wounds at the intersection of Larra Street and The Promenade, Yennora.
January 4 - Lone Wolf bikie, Neal Todorovski, 37, was shot dead outside a Sans Souci apartment block.
January 1 - Matthew Hedges, a 25-year-old father of four, was shot in the chest and died, while two of his children slept beside him in Chester Hill.
December 5 - A father and his teenage son escaped injury after a shot was fired into a house in Mount Pritchard.
November 26 - Shots were fired on Charles Street, Petersham.
November 25 - Shots were fired at a house on Kingarth Street, Busby.
November 24 - Shots were fired at a house on Nash Street, South Penrith.
November 24 - Shots were fired at a business on Cleveland and Walker streets, Redfern.
November 10 - Shots were fired at a house on Nineveh Crescent, Greenfield Park.
November 6 - Shots were fired at a house on Stevens Street, Ermington.
October 27 - November 3 - Six drive-by shootings across Sydney's west, believed to involve the Hells Angels and Nomads gangs.
October 21 - Man dies after he was shot in the head inside a house in French Street, Maroubra. October 18 - Shots were fired at a house on Walker Street, Turrella.
October 3 - Man was charged after allegedly shooting at another man on Pickwick Way, Ambarvale.
September 30 - Man was charged after an alleged drive-by shooting on Victoria Street, Botany.
September 29 - Police officers shot and killed a man outside Castle Hill police station.
September 26 - Teenager was shot by police in his home in Holmes Street, Colyton, following reported break-in.
September 26 - Man was charged with murder following the shooting death of man at Bonnyrigg the day before.
September 6 - Shots were fired at a house in Revesby in south-west Sydney.
September 6 - Shots were fired at a unit in Eden Street, Arncliffe.
September 5 - Man found in Bursill Street, Guildford, with a shotgun wound to his upper thigh.
August 30 - Up to a dozen shots were fired between two cars in Greenacre.
August 25 - Bullet holes were found in a car on Lackey Street, Merrylands.
August 24 - Bullets hit a house on Francis Street, Fairfield.
August 22 - Pizza shop was hit on Merrylands Road, Merrylands.
August 22 - Two men were shot in Barcom Street, Merrylands, in a domestic dispute.
August 23 - Bullets hit a house on Lachlan Street, Bossley Park.
August 21 - Bullets hit a house on Eddy Street, Merrylands West.
August 20 - Bullets hit a hairdressing salon on Harris Street, Fairfield.
August 19 - Bullets hit a house on Mallacoota Street, Wakeley, near Fairfield.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/five-sydn...rf-war-link-20120417-1x48m.html#ixzz2HvA4QFXR


http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/five-sydn...-bikie-gang-turf-war-link-20120417-1x48m.html
 
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Bikie dies in triple shooting at wedding
Updated Mon Nov 5, 2012 2:55pm AEDT

Police say a Sydney man killed in a triple shooting at a wedding in Sydney's south-west last night was a member of the Comanchero bikie gang.

Faalau Pisu, 23, was shot in the head as he left the reception at a function centre called the Serbian National Defence Council in Bareena Street, Canley Vale, just after midnight (AEDT).

He was taken to Liverpool Hospital, where he died this morning.

Two other men were injured, with witnesses reporting at least three shots were fired.

New South Wales Police acting director of organised crime Arthur Katsogiannis says officers spoke to dozens of bikies as they arrived for the reception.

"They were monitoring the event to make sure that it was quite peaceful - and it was at the time, till they left obviously," he said.

Superintendent Katsogiannis says the injured men are under police guard.

"All three men - two of them are confirmed members of the Comanchero Outlaw Motorcycle Club and one of those men is an associate," he said.

"The other two men who have been shot are currently at hospital in a stable condition."


PHOTO: Faalau Pisu later died in hospital. (Facebook)
Overnight about 50 friends and family gathered at the hospital, including a man wearing the insignia of the Comanchero bikie gang.

Mr Pisu listed himself as a supporter of the Comancheros on Facebook, and it is understood dozens of the gang's members were among about 350 guests at the wedding.

Mr Pisu's sister Faimai Faye Ale has described her brother as a family man with a big heart.

"He went this morning and our family's really hurt at the moment," she said.

"Faalau was the best guy.

"He was a guy with a big heart and he loved each and every one of us, especially the children.

"So we're going to miss him a lot.

"We love you Faalau, and we wish this didn't happen to you."

The other men injured in the shooting were a 27-year-old who was shot in the leg and a 25-year-old who suffered only minor injuries.

Hours later police pushed back a group of men who tried to enter the crime scene.

This morning a shirt, a pillow and a bottle of alcohol still lay on the street, which had been sealed off by police.

The police Gangs Squad and Homicide Squad are investigating.

Police are searching for a blue ute, believed to have been carrying the gunman.

Superintendent Katsogiannis police will also be out in force tonight.

"Certainly we'll be putting up our own strategies in terms to try and prevent any further shots being fired or any other individuals being shot at," he said.

"What I want to assure the members of the public is that we're putting all our available resources in respect to this particular investigation to ensure that there is no further recriminations come out of it."

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-11-05/three-injured-in-sydney-wedding-shooting/4352468
 
Kings Cross gang muscles in on Gold Coast and Melbourne drug trade

RUNNING Kings Cross is clearly not enough - one of Sydney's most feared crime gangs is on a recruitment drive, trying to expand into the hallowed drug turf of Melbourne and the Gold Coast.

A member of the pseudo-bikie gang Notorious has broken ranks for the first time to reveal details about the group which he says "is maybe the biggest (criminal) gang in Sydney" today.

"They run Kings Cross, it's what other gangs are calling 'Little Arabia' because of the Middle Eastern people over there running all the shit," he tells Channel 7's Gangs of Oz program tonight.

With his image, voice and name changed to protect his identity, Wahlid tells how Notorious is "into everything" - a long as it makes them buckets of cash.

"Notorious, they are into drugs, they are into weapons, they are into everything you can think of," Wahlid said.

Related Coverage

Notorious bikie member arrested
The day I met King of the Cross
Criminals hijacking bikie clubs
Home of Notorious bikie raided
This will end in another Milperra
Forty years of bikie hatred
Rise of a wave of criminal alliances The Daily Telegraph, 13 Dec 2012
Brutal bikie war goes national Adelaide Now, 30 Apr 2012
Top cop reassures Brisbane over bikie threat The Daily Telegraph, 11 Jan 2012
'We will crack down on gun crime' The Daily Telegraph, 15 Feb 2011
Islamic bikie gang sparks police concern The Daily Telegraph, 13 Dec 2010
"They have got links to every industry from the post office to the police force, from Bob's Guns to Ahmeds Butchery, you know?

"The aim of Notorious is to make as much money as they can by getting as much area in Sydney as they can."

He even explains how new members are given a handbook to educate them about their operations.

"You get a handbook where you learn how to make drugs, how to make guns, where to get (them), what areas are controlled by the gang, everything like that," he said.

"One chapter's about weapons, one's about drugs and the others about area its really detailed man, point form."

Notorious boss Allan Sarkis, and fellow founding member David Lima, created the group on the back of Sam Ibrahim's defection from the Nomad's outlaw motorcycle gang.

However most of their members don't ride bikes.

Wahlid's own criminal background, which he says began when he was still at school, indicates the level of violence members are prepared to go to in order to serve the heirarchy.

He says he shot two people when he was only 16.

NSW Police Superintendent Ken McKay says the Middle Eastern gangs exhibit a special brand of violence.

"At the end of the day it just leads to dead people on the streets of Sydney," he said.

Gangs of Oz is also believed to be preparing to screen an episode which focuses on the Ibrahim family - but which is not nearly as complimentary as the upcoming Underbelly series is said to be.

However, that episode may not screen in NSW for legal reasons.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/kings-cross-gang-muscles-in-on-gold-coast-and-melbourne-drug-trade/story-e6freuy9-1225831140004
 
The Comancheros motorcycle gang are rolling west into Victoria and South Australia

Monique Hore From: Herald Sun September 10, 2012 12:00AM

FOR almost a decade after its inception in 1966, the Comanchero Motorcycle Club kept to itself, shielding the public from boozy, violent behaviour within.


Comancheros - the basics
Mottos: “Always Comanchero, Comanchero Always”
Formed: 1966 in Sydney
Motif: Eagle on red and black circle
Reach: Bosnia, Spain
Local: Melbourne, Williamstown, Hallam

Formed in 1966 by Scotsman William George “Jock” Ross.

A former soldier, Ross wanted his club to operate like a military unit, a disciplined brotherhood.

Ross dubbed himself “supreme commander” and wrote up a set of ten rules for members to follow, which included such things as not being allowed to have an affair with another member’s partner or wife.

The club has expanded from its Sydney base into Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia, and into Europe.

A long-serving Australian member formed the club’s first international chapter in Sarajevo, Bosnia, in 2004, his home town.

As they created new chapters in recent years the club widened its membership to allow Middle Eastern and Islander members.

Club positions include president, commander, vice-president, sergeant-at-arms and secretary.

Members home nation is shown in a strap below the bird (believed to be an eagle) insignia, with “Comanchero” arched across its top.

Titles are indicated in patches on the front of a vest or jacket.

Other patches include a 1% badge, the state the wearer’s chapter is based in, and ACCA (Always Comanchero, Comanchero Always).

Deceased members of the club are also acknowledged with “In Memory Of” patches on the front of a vest.

Comanchero founder Ross was the club’s only president until being ousted several years ago.

Prospective members are “nominees” and expected to obey the motto “if the president says jump, ask how high”.

A short history of the Comancheros
FOR almost a decade after its inception in 1966, the Comanchero Motorcycle Club kept to itself, shielding the public from boozy, violent behaviour within.

Their founder, Scotsman William George "Jock" Ross, ruled the Sydney-based club with an iron fist, demanding members live by the club's motto: "Always Comanchero, Comanchero Always."

They were to abide by club rules such as never to sleep with another member's "ol' lady" and, above all, remain loyal to the club.

It was the violation of this latter - and sacred - bikie law that sparked Australia's most infamous bikie battle in 1984, the Milperra Massacre.

After months of in-fighting, Ross' follower Anthony "Snodgrass" Spencer defected from the Comancheros to start the first Australian chapter of the Bandidos, an American bikie gang.

His defection was viewed as treason and on Father's Day 1984 the two bikie gangs squared off in Milperra's Viking Tavern car park, as families visiting a motorcycle swap meet ran for their lives.

Four Comancheros, two Bandidos, and innocent Leanne Walters, 14, died during that 10-minute gun battle, that left at least 20 others injured.

In a landmark criminal trial lasting 14 months, nine men were found guilty of all seven murders and affray, while 21 others were found guilty of manslaughter and affray.

Judge Adrian Roden, who presided over the trial, warned about the dangers of bikie culture.

"As patriotism can lead to jingoism, and mateship can lead to cronyism, so bikie club loyalty can lead to bikie club war," he said.

On appeal, all nine murder convictions were overturned and all those jailed were back on the streets in just over five years.

Despite leaving prison in a white stretch limousine, Ross claimed the Comancheros "got totally screwed." He was unrepentant about his role at Milperra.

"I can look at myself in the mirror and know that I was not to blame. I did not cause what happened," he told Sydney's Daily Telegraph.

"I was blamed for the club splitting because I like things done in a military style; I still do," said Ross.

In the decade following the massacre, tensions between the Comancheros and the Bandidos simmered away, but both clubs were also careful not to further tarnish their image.

"They still hate each other's guts but they're not stupid," said one gang member said on the Milperra Massacre's tenth anniversary.

"Besides, they are too busy with other more profitable activities."

Like most outlaw motorcycle gangs, the Comancheros have been involved in tit-for-tat violence with other gangs over turf and power.

In 1999, the body of Comanchero bikie Peter Michael John Ledger was found dumped in the driveway of his ex-wife's house.

He had been tortured and beaten to death by Comancheros sergeant-at-arms Ian Clissold for selling a Harley-Davidson motorcycle, against club rules.

According to court papers, Clissold had been ordered to "sort somebody out who had been causing a bit of trouble'' and that the beating "went a bit too far."

Both police and the public were becoming concerned by the increasing power of a smaller group of bikie gangs, linked to a pact to limit the number of gangs controlling the drugs market.

"In early 1994, following the world trend, there was a meeting in Sydney between the major gangs where it was decided informally that the gangs in the country would adopt a similar stance to that already being set up by the rest of the OMCG (outlawed motorcycle gangs)," a New Zealand report into organised crime read.

"It was agreed in principle that there would be a maximum of six gangs controlling Australia by the year 2000, hence the project being dubbed The Australia 2000 Pact," said the report.

It appeared that the Comancheros may have been locked out of the lucrative drug market, as they were not included in the six powerful gangs vying for dominance.

But they survived, and in 2001, their western Sydney headquarters in Erskine Park was firebombed, causing about $40,000 damage.

In the following years, police suspected a feud between the Comancheros and the Nomads was escalating after a spate of clubhouse fire-bombings, bashings and drive-by shootings.

The Comancheros were also suspected of spraying more than a dozen bullets into Sydney's DCM nightclub, linked to the Nomads, injuring three people in May 2007.

Later that year, Comanchero boss Mahmoud "Mick" Hawi was the target of a shooting at Grappa Restaurant in Leichhardt, before the warring between the Comancheros and Nomads ceased.

The Comancheros didn't stay quiet for long, however, as a turf war soon exploded when Hells Angel Peter Zervas opened a tattoo parlour in Brighton-Le-Sands, known as Comanchero territory.

In a move that worried police, a bomb cushioned with sandbags to direct the impact was used to firebomb the Hells Angel's Petersham clubhouse, with the Comancheros suspected of the attack.

A few days later, a Comanchero was shot in the leg by four men alleged to have been wearing Hells Angels colours.

Just like the Milperra massacre, the tit-for-tat warring between the Comancheros and the Hells Angels boiled over with tragic consequences in Sydney Airport in March 2009.

Hawi and four other Comancheros had boarded a flight from Melbourne to Sydney. Hells Angels chapter president Derek Wainohu also happened to be on board.

When the plane touched down, each gang called for reinforcements.

The ensuing wild brawl in front of horrified travellers claimed the life of Peter Zervas' brother, 29-year-old Anthony Zervas.

Fourteen people were charged with the murder, 11 Comancheros and two Hells Angels, including Hawi.

Just days after the attack, Hawi banned the wearing of Comanchero club colours and riding of motorcycles in a bid to curb the escalating bikie violence.

But Hawi's call for calm among bikie gangs was ignored when Peter Zervas was shot as he arrived at his mother's home nine days after the airport brawl.

Police found Zervas leaning against his white car which was left streaked with his blood.

They are still to nail the shooter.

Amid the escalating and public violence, the NSW government introduced legislation to outlaw the bikie gangs, which led the "one per cent" clubs - bikie gangs who ignore the law - to band together.

They set up a United Motorcycle Council and even hired a PR company to repair their shattered public image.

A court mix-up in 2009 saw Hells Angel David Padovan faxed the names and addresses of 47 Comancheros, including those involved in the airport brawl, instead of a list of Angels he was barred from associating with.

An immediate inquiry was called to investigate the bungle.

Despite the carnage of that year, the Comancheros's Sydney chapter celebrated Christmas in 2009 by cruising the Sydney Harbour.

More than two years after the airport brawl, Hawi was found guilty of murdering Anthony Zervas, while the 13 others were found not guilty.

Zervas' mother Frederica Bromwich called out: "No punishment is enough for the loss of my son," as Hawi was sentenced to a minimum of 21 years behind bars.

While the bikie wars raged on, the Comancheros expanded from their Sydney base into South Australia and Victoria.

At the helm of the South Australian expansion was former Hells Angel and founder of New Boys street gang Vince Focarelli.

Just a year later in December 2011, Focarelli was stripped of his club presidency.

He survived three attempts on his life and bragged on Facebook that he was "the only man on the planet with nine lives".

From hospital after one attempt he released a statement reading, "Mr Focarelli denies there is any disharmony or in-house fighting with the Comancheros Motorcycle Club."

Three weeks later, he survived a fourth attempt on his life, but his 22-year-old son Giovanni was killed.

The Comancheros have recently expanded their reach in Victoria and boast a lavishly decorated clubhouse in Port Melbourne.

The Spearmint Rhino strip club is a known Comancheros haunt in Melbourne, and the gang runs three clubhouses in suburban Victoria.


http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/law-order/the-comancheros-outlaw-motorcycle-gange-are-rolling-west-into-victoria-and-south-australia/story-fnat79vb-1226464213266
 
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