Organised crime in Australia
Organised crime in Australia refers to the activities of various groups of crime families, organised crime syndicates or underworld activities including drug trafficking, contract killing, racketeering and other crimes in Australia.
See List of criminal enterprises, gangs and syndicates
European-Australian Networks
The Carlton Crew is an Italian-Australian criminal organisation from Melbourne, Victoria. It was formed in the late 1970s by gangster Alphonse Gangitano and named after the Melbourne suburb in which it is based. The organisation had a strong rivalry with the Honoured Society and the Calabrese Family, both of which were Calabrian 'Ndrangheta groups also based in Melbourne. The Carlton Crew had a strong role in the infamous Melbourne gangland killings.The Honoured Society was a Calabrian 'Ndrangheta criminal group that operated in Melbourne, Australia. In 1963, it was reportedly involved in the Victoria Market Murders. It was led by gangster Frank Benvenuto until his slaying in 2000. Tony Romeo, another high-ranking member, was shot in 2002. Ndrangheta operating in Australia include the Arena, Italiano, Muratore, Benvenuto and Condello clans.
The first Serbian mafiosi came to Australia in the late 70's, organised in a Yugoslav clan, their headquarters were some 15 kafanas in Sydney, Wollongong and Melbourne. In the 80's the Serbian Mafia was reinforced with the arrival of Serbian immigrants. Milivoje Matović "Miša Kobra", arrived to Sydney in 1986 and became a known gambler who organised big games. His younger brother Braca owed money to the gang of Žorž Stanković, Žorž sent his son Batica for Miša Kobra whose friend Boža Cvetić threw down the street after he had pointed a gun at them. Batica was deported to Serbia and Braca was killed in the meantime. Žorž was killed in 1993 and his son Batica in 1996. In 2005 interviews with Australian Serbs, it was said some 20 Zemun clan members operated in Australia at the time, double the number working prior to Operation Sablja. Serbian boxer Božidar Cvetić who in 2002 was stabbed, now worked as a bouncer in Australia said that Australian police had shown him pictures of some 150 Serbian criminals active in Australia. In May 2007, Australian police saw recruitment to organised crime motorcycle gangs from young Serbs.
Godfather of an Albanian mafia family 'Daut Kadriovski' gained attention of Australian Authorities after creating a drug pipeline through Albanian and Croatian communities in Sydney and Brisbane.
North Asian networks
- Russian mafia
- Yakuza
Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs
Clubs in Australia include:
- Bandidos - The Bandidos are one of the “Big Four” gangs identified by the FBI. They have 19 chapters across Australia and between 250 and 400 members. One of the clubs that has actively recruited from ethnic groups in recent years.
- Coffin Cheaters - They have chapters in Western Australia, Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland, as well as in Norway. They have between 200 and 300 members.
- Comanchero - One of the oldest and growing outlaw clubs in Australia and internationally, its headquarters are in Western Sydney. They have between 300 - 350 members with chapters in NSW, SA, CAN, WA, VIC & QLD.
- Gypsy Joker - The Gypsy Joker MC, an American-formed club, are most notorious for the 2001 car-bomb murders of West Australian police senior investigator Don Hancock and Lawrence Lewis. They have between 200 and 300 members in Australia.
- Hells Angels - Founded in the US but now active worldwide. In Australia, they have 150-250 members and are allied with the Nomads.
- Nomads - The Nomads club has no website and is not as widely known as other clubs, but does have a significant presence in the press as an outlaw motorcycle club engaged in allegedly illegal activities.
- Notorious - The club Notorious, a recent ethnically Middle Eastern based gang, have started competing with existing traditionally Anglo-Celtic bikie gangs, in a turf war for drug sales. Notorious is reportedly using members of the Middle Eastern and Islander communities in Sydney, and are believed to be recruiting members of those backgrounds from other clubs. They have between 150-200 members.
- Rebels - The Rebels are the largest outlaw motorcycle club in Australia, and have 29 chapters. They are a more traditional club and are run by former boxer and founding member, Alex Vella. They are by far the largest club in Australia with around 2,000 members.
East and Southeast Asian gangs
In terms of Chinese gang activity, highly organised crime syndicates in Sydney have looked to Chinese youths on student visas for their recruitment drives. Multimillion-dollar prostitution rackets have been operating in Melbourne for several years, one of the largest by Mulgrave woman Xue Di Yan. Vietnamese syndicates have gained media attention again recently with a recent drug bust in Melbourne. Casino high roller, Thanh Hai Pham, and his wife were ring leaders of this syndicate and a total of 12 people were arrested in connection with this operation. Of a much less organised nature, has been the violence perpetrated by youths of Southeast Asian descent across Melbourne. Luke Mitchell, who in 2009 came to the aid of a stranger, was set upon and stabbed by a group of Thai nationals who have since been arrested. One of the most horrendous acts of violence in recent times has been the machete attack outside Bubble nightclub on bouncer, Ahmad Chokr, was committed by the notorious Yellow Klique gang, one of the most violent Asian gangs in the last decade. Most recently, a man was beaten in front of his family at St. Albans station by a group of youth of "Asian appearance".
In Australia, the major importer of illicit drugs in recent decades has been 'The Company', according to police sources in the region. This is a conglomerate run by triad bosses which focuses particularly on methamphetamine and cocaine. It has laundered money through junkets for high-stakes gamblers who visit Crown Casinos in Australia and Macau.
See Triad
See 5T
See Spider Boys
See Sing Wah
See Yee Tong
Latin and South American cartels
The now-defunct Bogota Cartel of Colombia had operations in Australia.See also Sinaloa Cartel, Mexico
Street and youth gangs
Bodgies & widgies were the first of the teen gangs in Australia post WW2 - the term "bodgie" originated in the Darlinghurst area of Sydney. It was just after the end of WW2 and rationing had caused a flourishing black market in USA made cloth. People used to try and pass off inferior cloth as American-made when in fact it was not: so it was called "bodgie". The first bodgie gang was the ‘Woolloomooloo Yanks’ who congregated in Cathedral Street Woolloomooloo. By 1948 about 200 bodgies were regularly frequenting Kings Cross milk bars. Soon, bodgie gangs formed at other inner-Sydney locations. After a time, moccasins and American drape suits complete with pegged trousers replaced their attire of blue jeans and leather American Airline jackets or zoot suits.The mid 1960s saw the arrival of the "sharpie" culture - The sharpie gangs were particularly prominent in Melbourne, but were also found in Sydney and Perth to lesser extents. The focus was again on fashion with the guys wearing tight fitting jeans from Lee, Levi, Westco & Eastcoast brands - and some wearing bib and brace denim overalls. The sharpie cardigan or "connie" was an essential and expensive piece of knitwear with many sharps spending up to two weeks wages on a particular design. Shoes were also a key component of the look with sharps wearing leather platform shoes or others with Cuban heels sourced from local shoe manufacturers. The sharpie gangs were highly territorial and wild brawls were common place at dance halls or disco's when two different gangs happened to both attend. The sharpie culture went through three distinct waves of popularity from the mid 1960s through to around 1980. The sharpies were huge fans of local Aussie rock music and listened to bands such as Billy Thorpe & the Aztecs, Lobby Loyde's Coloured Balls, Buster Brown and of course AC/DC. The movement essentially died out as many sharps had grown up and were tired of the constant fighting with other gangs and being targeted by law enforcement - many more had drifted off to become immersed in newer and less violent influences such as punk, ska, rocksteady & reggae.
The early 1980s saw the rise of various ethnically based gangs in Sydney & Melbourne - the surge of migrants fleeing wars in the Middle East saw young males from these countries forming various street gangs including, the Black Dragons, the Lebanese Tigers and the Turkish Lions.
During the early 1990s, Melbourne youth gangs included:
3174, based around Noble Park and Springvale; Keyzy/Burra boys, based in Keysborough; LSC, Euro Boyz based in St. Albans through to Taylors Lakes; 14K, based in Footscray; BST, based in Sunshine, Deerpark & Werribee; MC3, based in Dandenong South; Oakleigh Wogs, based in Oakleigh; Springy Nips, based in Springvale; RT Criminals, based in Camberwell and Ashburton; WTP, based in Glen Iris and East Malvern; HTL, based in Kew, Hawthorn and Shepparton;
Previous gangs in Melbourne include Brothers for Life, Sunshine Boys, Young St Albans and Kings Park, Yellow Klique the Springvale-based Springvale Boys. More current gangs include Straight Sunshine, Liberty Loyalty Life Knowledge, Young Thirty Twenty, Kings Park St Albans and Richmond based gang Hard 2 Kill. These gangs are seen to be predominantly of South- East Asian descent, most notably Vietnamese. This gang war has seen an increase in knife attacks amongst young Asian men as well as a rise in bottle and glass related assaults. These gangs have shown to be extremely violent even in front of police and security. Their activity has gone from assaulting one another in the streets to fire bombing of rival's houses. In 2010, a Victoria Police task force headed by Acting Detective Inspector Dave de Francesco, named Task Force Echo, was formed to counter warring gangs.
Middle Eastern gangs
Middle-Eastern gangs rose to prominence around 1995–1996 in Australia, most prominently in Sydney. By 2000, the middle Eastern gangs had gained ground in Sydney, conducting extortion against nightclubs, ram raids, and car theft. More recently, drive-by shootings have become more common, with tit for tat drive by shooting starting as early as 1998, and becoming more common in recent years. including a drive by machine gun attack on a police station in Lakemba, Sydney. In 2006, concerns over the lack of intelligence in the wake of revenge attacks, which included stabbings and assaults, by Middle Eastern youths following the Cronulla riots; led the NSW Police to set up a permanent Middle-Eastern Organised Crime squad similar in vein to the existing Asian Crime Squad.Prominent individuals
- John Wren, controversial Melbourne businessman, who is alleged to have masterminded a large-scale SP bookmaking operation based in Melbourne in the early 1900s, and who was the model for John West, the subject of the famous Frank Hardy novel Power Without Glory.
- Abe Saffron, notorious 20th-century Sydney crime figure.
- Lenny McPherson, notorious 20th-century Sydney crime figure.
- George Freeman, notorious 20th-century Sydney crime figure.
- Percival John Galea, notorious 20th-century Sydney crime figure.
- Robert Trimbole, Griffith-based 'Ndrangheta boss and drug trafficker.
- Terry Clark New Zealand-born drug syndicate boss
- Melbourne-based drug dealers Tony Mokbel and Dennis Allen
- Chopper Read, Melbourne-based standover man and hitman.
- Kath Pettingill, matriarch of the Melbourne-based criminal family, the Pettingill family.
- Dennis Bruce Allen, member of the Melbourne-based criminal family, the Pettingill family.
- Victor George Peirce, member of the Melbourne-based criminal family, the Pettingill family.
Activities
[Violence]
[Homicide]
See Melbourne gangland killingsSee Sydney Airport bikie killing
See John Newman
[Terrorism]
See Terrorism in AustraliaAustralia has known acts of modern terrorism since the 1960s, while the federal parliament, since the 1970s, has enacted legislation seeking to specifically target terrorism. In terms of the predictors of and motivations behind such activities, theories of social disorganisation and anomie describe the clear political and social focus. The Australian government's foreign affairs, defence and humanitarian policies are also pertinent to this analysis, justifying the application of cross-cultural conflict.
These include the Sydney Hilton bombing and Turkish consulate bombing, as well as the activities of militant Islamic groups such as
Faheem Khalid; Mohammed Abderrahman ; Joseph T. Thomas; the Sydney Five and 2005 Sydney terrorism plot.; the Benbrika Group in Melbourne ; and the Holsworthy Barracks terror plot.
[Arson]
See Whiskey Au Go Go fire[Sexual Assault]
See Sydney Gang Rapes[Protection racket]s, [Extortion] and [Coercion]
See Alphonse GangitanoFinancial Crime
[Money laundering]
- Connection with legitimate operations
- Economic impacts
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[Counterfeiting]
[Tax Evasion]
- Connection with legitimate operations
- Economic impacts
[Cybercrime]
[Copyright Infringement]
In the 2007 Australian federal budget, the AFP was provided with additional funding of $8.3m over two years to strengthen its capability to pursue serious and complex IP crime, particularly where organised or transnational criminal elements are involved. AFACT has reported that links between organised crime and film piracy were first uncovered following a raid on Malaysia-linked pirates in Sydney in 2002. The Australian Subscription Television and Radio Association referred to several cases involving pirates who were involved in other criminal activity such as prostitution and drugs possession. Status Investigations and Security Pty Ltd referred to a matter that indicated organised links between copyright offences and importation of prohibited weapons. Trademark Investigation Services argued that ‘Recent Police cases suggest such links’. They pointed out that ‘To examine high quality goods and packaging it is obvious that a single person could not set up the productions, packaging, export, import, wholesale, etc. alone. There is a network or chain where each party along the way is a part of the ongoing conspiracy to manufacture, package and sell the goods for profits they could not otherwise make from those goods if they were plain, unbranded goods.’[Cyberwarfare]
The most common form of cyberwarfare perpetrated by online criminal organisations is the Denial-of-service attack. Hacking, denial of service, access to and leaking of government documentation have all been highlighted as key concerns for Australia.[White-collar crime] and [Corruption]
Public Sector ([Political Corruption])
- Royal Commission on the activities of the Federated Ship Painters and Dockers Union , investigated organised crime influences and drug trafficking in a large trade union;
- Royal Commission of Inquiry into Drug Trafficking, ;
- Royal Commission into Drug Trafficking, investigated drug trafficking in New South Wales, especially links between the Mafia and New South Wales Police and the disappearance of Donald Mackay;
- Royal Commission into the Building and Construction Industry,, investigated the conduct of industrial relations within the building industry;
- Inquiry into certain Australian companies in relation to the UN Oil-For-Food Programme,, investigation into the alleged participation of the AWB into the Oil for Food program;
- Royal Commission into Commercial Activities of Government and Other Matters investigated the collapse of Bond Corporation, Rothwells, Bell Group, and other large businesses in Western Australia as well as government commercial enterprises.
Private Sector ([Corporate crime])
- The Cole Commission;
- Royal Commission into HIH Insurance, investigated the collapse of HIH Insurance, then Australia's second largest insurance company;
- Royal Commission of Inquiry in respect of certain matters relating to allegations of organised crime in clubs investigated organised crime in New South Wales.
[Drug trafficking]
[Clandestine chemistry]
Criminal organisations may generate significant income through the manufacture and trafficking of illicit drugs and their precursor chemicals. Increased involvement has resulted in larger and more sophisticated clandestine laboratories being detected in Australia. In 2008–09, a record 449 clandestine laboratories were detected in Australia.67.7 per cent of clandestine laboratories continue to be detected in residential locations. Over two tonnes of precursor chemicals for the production of meth/amphetamines were detected at the Australian border in 2008–09, nearly double the weight detected in 2007–08. In 2008–09, clandestine laboratory detections increased across most jurisdictions, the largest occurring in Western Australia, which increased from 30 laboratories in 2007–08 to 78 in 2008–09, an increase of 160 per cent. In the context of the Australian Illicit Drug Report, a clandestine laboratory is any concealed place where chemicals are used to produce illicit drugs. Such laboratories range from crude, makeshift operations using simple processes to highly sophisticated operations using technically advanced facilities. They can be located virtually anywhere—in private residences, motel and hotel rooms, apartments, horse trailers, houseboats, boats, vehicles, buses, trucks, campgrounds and commercial establishments—and are usually very portable. Some clandestine laboratories use very simple processes such as extracting cannabis oil from plants using solvents; others use complex processes involving a number of chemicals and a range of equipment to manufacture drugs such as methylamphetamine and ecstasy. Clan labs are usually discovered after they have exploded.
Mainly clan labs manufacture methylamphetamine but other drugs produced in Australia and reported on in connection with clandestine laboratories are ecstasy, methcathinone, cannabis oil, ‘crack’ cocaine, pethidine and gamma-hydroxybutyrate. Because of the increase in the number of clandestine laboratories detected in Australia, it was determined that there was a need for better exchange of information between the various jurisdictions. As a result, in August 1997 the first Chemical Diversion Conference was held at the Australian Bureau of Criminal Intelligence; among other things, a categorisation of the various types of clandestine laboratories was developed. Initially there were three categories but a fourth has since been added. The categories are as follows:
- Category A—active ;
- Category B—stored/used ;
- Category C—stored/unused ;
- Category D—used site/evidence or admissions of a prior laboratory.
- flammable and/or explosive atmosphere;
- acutely toxic atmospheres;
- leaking or damaged compressed gas cylinders;
- clan labs located in confined spaces;
- water reactive and spontaneous explosive chemicals;
- damaged and leaking chemical containers;
- electrical hazards and sources of ignition;
- reactions – in progress, hot, under pressure;
- incompatible chemical reactions; and,
- bombs and booby traps.
The Police Commissioner son was involved in a clan lab explosion in March were a total of 5 people were injured. On 2 June a Gosnells house explodes, resulting in one man in hospital with severe burns. In 2010, 133 clan labs were dismantled. Of the clan labs discovered in 2010, 26 were in the cities of Armadale and Gosnells and the Shire of Serpentine-Jarrahdale. In Western Australia, Gosnells has proved to be the hotspot for drug manufacture, with six clan labs uncovered by police. Five labs were shut down in Armadale. Almost all drug labs were found to manufacture methlyamphetamine. The suburbs of Kelmscott, Huntingdale, Bedfordale and Southern River harboured two clan labs each until these were uncovered and shut down by officers.
Clan labs have also been detected in Camillo, Maddington, Thornlie, Mundijong, Byford, Brookdale and Karrakup.
[Heroin]
- Source countries / production: "three major regions known as the golden triangle, golden crescent and Central and South America. The majority of heroin imported into Australia comes from Burma. However there are suggestions that due to the continuing decline in opium production in South East Asia, traffickers may begin to look to Afghanistan as a source of heroin."
- Community impact: "In 2004, 384,800 people aged 14 years and over reported having used heroin, methadone and/or other opioids in their lifetime, with 56,300 using in the previous 12 months."
[Cocaine]
- Source countries / production: "Coca leaf is only grown in three countries for commercial distribution. These countries are Bolivia, Colombia and Peru. Therefore there is no local production of cocaine in Australia. "
- Community impact: "In a 2004 survey, one percent of people aged 14 years and over indicated they had used cocaine in the previous 12 months."
[Meth]/[amphetamines] (including [MDMA])
- Source countries / production: "the majority of amphetamines consumed in Australia is produced in this country in clandestine laboratories."
- Community impact: "more than 9% of Australians aged 14 and over indicated they had used amphetamines at some stage in their lifetime and 3% had used amphetamines in the past 12 months. According to the Australian Crime Commission, there is an increase in the number of young recreational drug users smoking crystal methamphetamine. Research also indicated an increase in use of methamphetamine, which occurred around the same time as the heroin shortage in Australia in 2000-01."
[LSD], [Psilocybin] and other [hallucinogen]s
- Source countries / production: "LSD is not generally produced in Australia and is mainly imported from the United States of America. There are 30 types of hallucinogenic mushrooms growing naturally in this country and there have been seizures of spores from other countries."
- Community impact: "1.2 million people aged 14 years and over indicated they had used hallucinogens in their lifetime, with 116,400 using hallucinogens in the preceding 12 months."
[Cannabis]
- Source countries / production: "Cannabis is produced in most areas of Australia with a trend in recent years towards the use of hydroponics. It is now suspected that hydroponics is the most common method of cultivation in the domestic market. Growers believe that hydroponics produce a better yield, reduce the chances of detection and mitigate seasonal climate changes. There is a level of cannabis importation from countries including the Netherlands and United Kingdom.
- Community impact: "Cannabis is the most widely used illicit drug in Australia and generally easily available. In a 2004 survey, it was reported that one in three Australians aged 14 years and over had used cannabis at least once in their life, with more than half a million indicating use in the last 12 months."
[Counterfeit medications]
- Source countries / production
- Community impact
[Human trafficking]
[Sex trafficking]
- Asian syndicates
- European syndicates
- Burdens on the Australian health system
[Illegal Immigration] ('Migrant Trafficking')
- Pacific Solution
- 2010/11 Refugee Debate
[Slavery] ('Labour Racketeering')
- Western Australian Construction and Fabrication Industries
- Western Australian Resources Industry
- Economic impacts
Legislative responses and policing measures
Federal
Australia's approach to criminalising money laundering differs from that of many other countries. Division 400 of the Criminal Code Act 1995 contains the principal criminal offences of money laundering in Australia. Division 400 was inserted into the Criminal Code by the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 in January 2003. There are currently 19 different offences of money laundering available under the Criminal Code, and these can be classified into two types: those linked to the proceeds of crime and those linked to the instruments of crime. Possessing the proceeds or instruments of crime is a single offence under the Criminal Code. Persons receiving, possessing, concealing, importing into Australia, exporting from Australia, or disposing of the proceeds of crime may be guilty of this offence. Possessing the proceeds of crime attracts a maximum custodial sentence of two years. The remaining 18 offences of money laundering are those of dealing with the proceeds or instruments of crime. 'Dealing with' the proceeds of crime includes all the actions considered as possession of the proceeds of crime as well as engaging in banking transactions using the illicit funds. These 18 offences are distinguished by the value of the property involved and the intent of the offender. The punishments' severity increases with the value and with the offender's knowledge of the source of the funds. The Criminal Code classifies offences according to the value of the funds involved into bands of $1,000,000 or more; $100,000 to $999,999; $50,000 to $99,999; $10,000 to $49,999; $1,000 to $9,999; and funds of any value.- Anti-Terrorism Act 2005 -
- now
-
State
South Australia
-
New South Wales
- : Asian Crime Squad; Drug Squad; Firearms & Organised Crime Squad; Gangs Squad; Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad; Organised Crime Squad
Offences including possession of precursors and certain apparatus for manufacture or production of prohibited drugs fall under Part 2, Division 2 of the Drug Misuse and Trafficking Act 1985. This means that these offences are considered indictable offences, and are heard in the District or Supreme Court. Defences to this offence include but are not limited to duress and necessity. Also, those licensed or authorised under the or somebody given authority by the Director General of the Department of Health are exempt from liability. Section 35A of the Drug Misuse and Trafficking Act 1985 outlines a further defence: it is legal to possess or manufacture a prohibited substance if the substance is contained in a product where the substance cannot be readily extracted, or in a product not for human consumption, or if the substance is possessed for the purpose of its disposal as waste or its destruction. The maximum penalty for this offence is a fine of $220,000, 10 years imprisonment or both.
Western Australia
- Director of Public Prosecutions v Kamal WASCA 55
- R v Quaid WASC 202
- Nguyen v State of Western Australia WASCA 81
- : Serious and Organised Crime Division which includes the Gang Crime Squad; Drug and Firearm Squad; Financial Crime Squad and Proceeds of Crime Squad
Queensland
- Vicious Lawless Association Disestablishment Act 2013
- Tattoo Parlours Act 2013
- Criminal Law Amendment Act 2013
Victoria
- Mokbel v R VSCA 106
- Major Crime Act 2004, Re VSC 128
- Poynder v Kent; Sodomacco v O'Bryan VSCA 245
Tasmania
-
Northern Territory
-
Australian Capital Territory
-
International and other jurisdictions
- Article 5 – Criminalization of participation in an organized criminal group.
- 6 – Criminalization of the laundering of proceeds of crime;
- 8 – Criminalization of corruption;
- 23 – Criminalization of obstruction of justice;
- 3 and 5 of the Protocol on Trafficking in Persons; and,
- 3, 5 and 6 of the Protocol Against Smuggling of Migrants
Title 21 of the United States Code - 1970 Ch. 12 Sub. and , particularly
See Continuing Criminal Enterprise
Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act - 1970
- Offences:
- Penalties:
Criminal Code, RSC 1985, c C-46.
Media representation and references in popular culture
TV drama
The topic has been widely covered in books and the news media and has also been the subject of several major Australian films and TV drama series including the ABC-TV series Phoenix, Janus and Blue Murder and, more recently, the popular Nine Network miniseries Underbelly.News media
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Print media