The connections between bikies and police officers.
In a development with parallels to the links between gangland
figures and corrupt police during Melbourne's underworld war, separate
investigations by several agencies have uncovered at least a dozen
police who are suspected of having inappropriate links to bikies.
Fairfax Media can reveal that Mitchell, the Bandidos sergeant-at-arms
and a suspected crime figure, has cultivated a relationship with a
Victorian police officer, communicating with him dozens of times in the
past two years in an apparent breach of the force's criminal
associations policy.
It is understood that the officer has also been accused of
with-holding information from police about who was behind the attempted
2011 underworld hit on Mitchell, which sparked the bikie war. The
policeman also advised Mitchell to avoid police attention and discussed
the use and sale of illegal steroids.
The police officer, whom Fairfax Media is not naming for legal
reasons, was recently suspended from the force and charged in
connection to allegations he bought illegal steroids from a Mitchell
associate.
Confidential reports from several agencies reveal that
Malkoun, who was convicted of trafficking $5.5 million worth of heroin
in 1988, has escaped arrest for a decade due to his links to corrupt
police.
Suspected police leaks to Malkoun or his crime syndicate have
led to the compromising of two international drug trafficking
investigations by federal policing agencies in 2011 and 2004.
Australian Federal Police internal reports from around 2004 describe
Malkoun as a drug trafficker and standover man and warn that he "has
displayed a willingness to exploit friendships with persons who are in a
position to assist him achieve his criminal endeavours [and that] …
Malkoun actively continues to cultivate friendships with serving members
of the Victoria Police''.
Between 2010 and last year, Malkoun continued to socialise
with Victorian policemen, inviting up to three officers to his Crown
Casino wedding, and attended a christening with two officers at a Greek
restaurant in central
Melbourne. During this period his syndicate has accessed
extraordinarily sensitive law enforcement information, including
details suspected to have come from a secret and supposedly highly
secure police list of Australian organised crime targets.
The multi-agency drug trafficking probe Operation Corsair was
abandoned in February 2011 after Malkoun received a tip-off that he
was on this list and being targeted by police. That tip-off mirrored
the leak Malkoun received in 2004, when he was the subject of an AFP
drugs operation codenamed Temper.
The leak that compromised Operation Corsair was captured by
secret phone taps, which recorded a Malkoun associate and Bandidos
senior member, Nick Zakharia, telling Malkoun that he and "three of our
people" were on a ''list'' and that police were monitoring Malkoun's
movements in a ''full-on'' manner. Zakharia is a key player in the
ongoing bikie war and a major police organised crime target.
After receiving the tip-off, Malkoun immediately called
Sydney Comanchero boss Zac Idik and told him that Malkoun's phones were
being tapped.
Investigations by the now disbanded Office of Police
Integrity and other agencies identified several Victorian policemen
associating with Malkoun or members of his criminal syndicate over
several years. It is understood the OPI assessed that when Malkoun and
Zakharia were speaking about the ''list'' they were referring to a
document of organised crime targets prepared by Victoria Police and
shared with federal and state counterparts. However, senior Victorian
police maintain this was never proven.
An AFP report from around 2004 states that members of
Malkoun's syndicate are "aware of police surveillance techniques,
having identified surveillance members and employing anti-surveillance
techniques".
One of Malkoun's closest associates in the police force was
recently resigned sergeant Richard Gelemanovic, who flew to the Spanish
city of Barcelona with Malkoun in 2004 when he was the target of
Operation Temper.
More recently, Mr Gelemanovic attended Malkoun's wedding and
has had regular contact with him. Property and other records show that
Mr Gelemanovic has had close associations with other figures with
underworld links, including Zakharia and a kickboxing promoter who
invested in an Edithvale property with the policeman.
Malkoun is a multimillionaire with extensive business
interests, including large shareholdings in Australian and overseas
private and publicly listed companies.
The Comancheros own tattoo parlours, nightclubs and other
licensed businesses across the state, often in defiance of regulations
that require them to be owned by people of good character.
A police spokesman told Fairfax Media on Tuesday that Mr
Gelemanovic had never declared his association with Malkoun as required
by force policy and that the policeman had resigned in November,
citing ill health. He was under investigation at the time, having been
suspended several months earlier on the basis that ''he was reasonably
believed to have committed an offence punishable by imprisonment''.
Other police charged over their links to bikies include
detective Andrew Tait, who has resigned from the force and was
convicted and fined in May last year over allegations he leaked
information to bikie figure Michael Manzaris.
Victoria Police has asked Fairfax Media to withhold details
of another investigation into links between a serving officer and
bikies because it is ongoing.
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