Hells Angels and Bandidos stopped at border



A member of the Hells Angels was refused entry into Australia after arriving at Perth airport. Border police searched his luggage and inside found his colours — a vest with the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club logo on it. The 44-year-old “Nomad” from France had arrived on a flight from Singapore and has links to local Hells Angels. He was turned around and deported as someone who posed a risk to public safety, police said.

It’s part of a large crackdown on foreign members of outlaw motorcycle gangs in Australia. Eight days earlier police arrested and deported a senior member of the Bandidos motorcycle club. He was a New Zealand citizen and his visa to stay in Australia was canceled. Police said he also posed a risk to the Australian public.

Since December 2014 — when the Australian government changed its immigration legislation — 191 members of outlaw motorcycle clubs or another organized crime group have had their visas cancelled or been refused entry at the border. It’s just so much easier for police to get rid of non-citizen bikers under the Migrant Act than it is to prove criminal charges in a court of law.


Australia - MC & Gjengkriminalitet/Youtube

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