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The Bikie Wars

Yeah i see what ur saying but who buys 1 pill? Nowdays i would need 5-6 or more in a night. Not dick sizing and i dont have any tolerance as i havnt had mdma for ages. If its quality and low quantity then of course they will increase prices. If there was alot more quality around which would flood the country then thered be competition and they would have to lower prices. Look at all the big supermarkets how they are competing with eachother.

i'm talking about coke
 
12th Comanchero charged with murder following fatal airport fight — Gangs Squad
Thursday, 03 Sep 2009 05:24am

*** Editors’ note: Moving vision of the arrest will be made available to news crews via Network Ten. Still images are available via email by contacting the NSW Police Force’s Media Unit on (02) 8263 6100. ***

Gangs Squad detectives have charged a twelfth Comanchero member, who will face court today following investigations into a fatal fight at Sydney Airport earlier this year.

Just before 4pm yesterday, detectives arrested a 41-year-old man outside his home on Eaglehawk Street at Heckenberg.

Police will allege he is a member of the Comanchero Outlaw Motorcycle Gang (OMCG).

He was taken to Green Valley Police Station where he was charged late last night with one count each of murder, riot and affray. He was refused bail to appear in Liverpool Local Court today.

To date a total of 15 OMCG members and associates have been charged by Strike Force Metter detectives, including 12 for murder.

Yesterday’s arrest relates to ongoing investigations by detectives into a fatal brawl at Sydney Airport on Sunday 22 March.

Anthony Zervas was treated at the scene after allegedly being assaulted; however, later died at the Prince of Wales Hospital.

Strike Force Metter was established to investigate the incident and comprises detectives from the State Crime Command’s Gangs Squad and Homicide Squad, along with investigators from the Central Metropolitan Region.

http://www.police.nsw.gov.au/news/l...nb3YuYXUlMkZtZWRpYSUyRjc3MTYuaHRtbCZhbGw9MQ==
 
Bikie Gregory Keating jailed for refusal to testify against gang
Greg Stolz
September 01, 2009

A SENIOR Gold Coast bikie has been jailed for refusing to break his gang's code of silence by testifying at a secret hearing into organise crime.

Finks bikie gang sergeant-at-arms Gregory Keating today pleaded guilty to refusing to give evidence before an Australian Crime Commission hearing in Brisbane last year.

The ACC's coercive powers allow it to force people to give evidence at 'star chamber' hearings or face jail.

But Southport District Court was told convicted drug dealer Keating, 30, refused to answer questions about illicit drug activity, or even confirm he was the Finks sergeant-at-arms.

...

Judge Leanne Clare told Keating he had been 'polite' but 'forthright' in refusing to answer the ACC's questions.

She organised crime was 'an insidious problem' that was 'notoriously hard for law enforcement agencies to address'.

''The coercive powers, and the compulsory examinations that go with it, is an important tool for the commission in its fight against organised crime,'' the judge told Keating.

''Your refusal to answer questions was deliberately obstructive of a legitimate inquiry.''

She jailed Keating for a year but ordered he be released on a $3000 good behaviour bond after serving four months.
http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,26011685-952,00.html

^^ smart boy. 4 months and a good behaviour bond is a small price to pay considering the alternative...

Hypothetically speaking, what if he genuinely had no connections to the gang? With the new anti OMCG regulations coming into play here soon could we see random members of the public locked up because they allegedly associated with an OMCG and couldn't answer questions at such a hearing in a manner satisfactory to the magistrate?
 
Third Fink charged over bashing



TOM ZED

September 06, 2009 12:10pm

A FINKS motorcycle gang member from Sydney has been arrested in Adelaide over violent crimes in Kilkenny in May.

The man, 34, was arrested by Crime Gangs Task Force at Yatala Prison on Saturday after he visited two other Finks arrested on June 5 over the same crimes.

One of those men was extradited from New South Wales after DNA evidence linked him to a violent gun-point abduction at Klemzig nine years ago.

He was also charged with two separate bashings of a man at Kilkenny, in 2008 and again in May this year.

The other, an Ovingham man, 29, who police say is a Finks club nominee, was charged over the latest bashing.

Police will allege the Sydney man went to a home on David Tce, Kilkenny, with the two co-accused about 6.30pm on May 21.

There the trio allegedly dragged the victim from his home and assaulted him, held a sharp instrument to his neck, threatened to kill him and his family if he did not submit to their demands, stole a Mercedes car and mobile phone, and attempted to steal another car.

The victim was taken to hospital with a broken jaw, punctured and collapsed lung, broken ribs, bruising and cuts and remained in hospital for 11 days.

The man arrested on Saturday has been charged with blackmail, causing serious harm, attempting to cause serious harm, attempted aggravated theft and committing theft using force.

He was refused bail and will appear in the Holden Hill Magistrates Court tomorrow.

Police urge anyone who has been the victim of blackmail of violence from members of outlaw motorcycle gangs to contact BankSA Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,26034013-5006301,00.html
 
Bikies charged over brawl back in custody

Posted 4 hours 18 minutes ago

Three Comancheros have been taken back into custody after the New South Wales Supreme Court revoked their bail on a murder charge.

The Director of Public Prosecutions applied for a review after a local court granted bail to Maher Aouli, Pomare Pirini and Frank Larosa.

The men are three of 12 Comancheros charged with murder, riot and affray after the death of Hells Angels associate Anthony Zervas in March.

In revoking bail, a judge referred to submissions about the ferocity and violence of the fight and its traumatic effect on witnesses.

The judge said he was not satisfied the crown case against the men was so weak that it justified exceptional circumstances.

He said the comancheros inflicted violence as a group.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/09/08/2680163.htm?section=justin
 
Yeah but they also offer long jail terms and death penalty for drug crimes !!!!!

Yeah they shouldnt have that tho. Its funny how a murderer anywhere in the world can get less than a drug dealer. I mean come on someone took someones life away and took that person away from family n friends and they are free in society? pft
 
Yeah they shouldnt have that tho. Its funny how a murderer anywhere in the world can get less than a drug dealer. I mean come on someone took someones life away and took that person away from family n friends and they are free in society? pft

It’s reasonable to assume they take into account the cumulative affect the drug industry has on society – No???
 
It’s reasonable to assume they take into account the cumulative affect the drug industry has on society – No???

U cant blame the drug. Its the people that use it. If u cant live a normal life then dont use it simple as that. Its very disturbing when people commit all sorts of crimes just to have access to it. Funny how i have never done anything major to have access to it. I dont think many of us have. If u cant handle life then u most cetainly shouldnt be doing drugs. Thats my point of view.
 
If you start thinking outside your little square you might realise that an individual’s drug use affects more than just what’s inside their sphere of influence. There is a substantial amount of crime associated with the illicit drug trade including robberies to obtain pre-cursors, bashings surrounding drug debts and murder to name just a few. Just because you may not be privy to what occurs as a result of your demand, or take part in the associated crime, doesn’t mean it’s not a major influencing factor when sentencing for drug crimes.

The chain ends with you – the user – but it’s what occurs from the top down that needs to be remembered when indulging. 8)
 
The chain ends with you – the user – but it’s what occurs from the top down that needs to be remembered when indulging.

Thats very true.

No one ever stands there for a second and thinks..."fuck, I wonder how many people were bashed/killed because of this pill/coke/weed/speed".
Like I bet that little one pill your about to eat has been through a lot just to get to your local dealer and then finally to you. But most people couldnt give a rats arse anyways. Stop and think about it one day before eating/snorting/injecting anything.

At the end of the day its us - The Consumers, that are fueling this war cause without us there would be no money for the business.
 
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Ah, bikies. Always a colourful debate. I've met some nice, friendly ones and I've been offered to be shown the sharp edge of a plate glass window by others.

Someone I know had a friend who was shot dead by some of them. They went to pick something up, it wasn't there (and it wasn't the friend's fault) so they shot him, maybe for the inconvenience?

Something that someone who knows told me once was that heaps of the base-level crime (beatings, extortion, blackmail, slanging etc) that is committed by clubs is actually carried out by nominees, or noms with the orders handed down from above. These are people who want to join up but are going through their testing phase before getting the mark. A lot of them are too stupid, have loose lips or light fingers to be useful as members so they are used for a while as cheap labour and then discarded.

I remember a while back some nominee or other fled from the police after they saw him running a red light on a motorbike. He threw away about 5 ounces of meth before crashing and being caught with another 20. Was a courier and had to run a red light whilst carrying... that's the kind of stupid shit that you hear about that is almost always attributed to nominees.

Life experience: Don't cross them and you'll be relatively safe. Never borrow money from them. Never get drugs "on tick". Never talk shit. Never make promises. Opt for the Russian system of business: Deals are made in the present, not the past. Speculation can kill you.

I wonder how these Control Orders are going to pan out? Someone I know knows two people that have them and it hasn't slowed them down one bit.

Ramble :\. Anyway...

About the death penalty for murder: I agree in principle but only for certain types of the crime. A murder that is a crime of the heart, provoked or spontaneous can't be treated the same way as a planned, organised one. I agree with the ultimate punishment for someone who, for example, kills another person over a pair of shoes but not for someone who kills, for example, spontaneously over a crime of passion.

For both sides of the argument: There are people in US prisons awaiting execution who will die, but are innocent, and it raises that old question:

Let 10 guilty men go free to save 1 innocent?

Or kill 10 innocent men to kill 1 guilty?

Peace.
 
I just wish the maffia was still around in Australia. There wernt any problems in the past with getting drugs and they controlled the bikies as well.
 
Rest assured they are still around, just in nowhere near the size and publicity they used to be. They are the guys you don't hear a thing about who are secretely making millions :)

I hope ur right mate. Ever since they went down with the 20 million pills there has been fuk all mdma. Little bit here n there but thats about it, bunks and pips galore. If u think bout it 20 million pills would last a long fukn time even tho we have so many pill munchers in Australia lol
 
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