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Finks Motorcycle Club
Finks Motorcycle Club
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The Finks are an Australian outlaw motorcycle club that was formed in Adelaide, Australia, in 1969[1] and now also has chapters in other states. The name comes from The Wizard of Id cartoon where the peasants, to his dismay, often proclaim, "The King is a fink!". The logo used by the Finks is of Bung, the king's jester. The pants worn by the jester used to differ in colour depending on the state the chapter resides in.

Key Information

The club was restricted by government actions in South Australia.[2][3][4][5] Despite rivalries, various other groups joined to protest the South Australian government's proposed "anti-bikie legislation".[6]

It was reported in October 2013 that most members were to switch to the United States–based Mongols Motorcycle Club.[7]

In 2019, a leader of the Finks Motorcycle Club committed suicide while awaiting charges for violent drug- and weapons-related offenses. Brent Reker moved cells shortly before he took his own life, and the incident is being investigated by the Victorian Coroners Court.[8]

Perth chapter

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The Perth chapter of the Finks was formed after Troy Mercanti was expelled from the Coffin Cheaters and joined his friend and South Australian Fink member Frank Condo in forming the Perth chapter in 2008. Other eastern states members came to Perth to start the chapter, but over time all, including Condo, either left the club or returned to their original states. The commencement of the Perth chapter caused friction between the Finks and the Coffin Cheaters Perth.

The Perth Finks clubhouse has been frozen under the proceeds of crime after Mercanti's then partner Tammy Kingdon was convicted by a District Court jury in November 2010 of four counts of stealing and one count of property laundering. Kingdon funnelled money from a Coffin Cheaters trust fund set up for the daughters of Marc Chabriere, who was a Coffin Cheaters member murdered during the 1998 bikie war between the Coffin Cheaters and the Club Deroes. The stolen money from the fund was used to purchase the Finks clubhouse.[9]

During the Motorplex brawl Fink member Stephen Wallace had three fingers severed. Finks members Clovis Chikonga, Troy Smith, Stephen Laurence Silvestro, Tristan Roger Allbeury, and Stephen Wallace were all imprisoned for two years despite pleas from their lawyer that Allbeury had bipolar disorder, ADHD and suffered post traumatic stresses.[10][11]

Wallace is the long-term boyfriend of fellow convicted heroin trafficker Holly Deane-Johns, who served time in WA before arrest in Thailand in 2000 for trying to mail 10.4 grams of heroin to Perth. She was jailed in 2003 for 31 years before her prisoner transfer deal in 2007.[12]

Allbeury is currently held on remand after being charged by Gang Crime Squad Detectives with Attempting to Pervert the Course of Justice. Allbeury is also charged with Grievous Bodily Harm over a prison assault that broke a fellow inmates jaw. In September 2012, whilst in prison, Allbeury was found with a smart phone and cannabis in his cell.[13]

Mercanti was arrested in January 2012 by the Gang Crime Squad and jailed in March 2013 for 6 years and 10 months after pleading guilty late in his trial to domestic violence charges against his former partner Tammy Kingdon. Increasing drug and alcohol use were blamed for the 15 years of abuse.[14][15] In October 2013 the Perth Finks were patched over by the Mongols MC and Rock Machine.

Other states

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Popular criminal Vince Focarelli was kicked out of the Hells Angels. He then joined other clubs including the Comancheros, and set up his own club. He left the Comancheros later. He and his son Giovanni were shot at by unknown assailants in 2012. Vince was sent to the Royal Adelaide Hospital and his son died. He has refused to name any suspects even though this was not the first time he was targeted. While Vince was in hospital, he was visited by friends who are Finks members. Some Finks members also visited the funeral of Giovanni.[16][17]

In 2012, Finks member Mark James Graham was charged with the attempted murder of Bandidos member Jacques Teamo in a shooting at the Robina Town Centre shopping Centre.[18]

In 2012, Patrick Mcmillan was arrested and charged with firing a pistol at a man, and intentionally and recklessly causing serious injury to him at his Ferntree Gully home he shared with his girlfriend Rachel Osborn, theft, trespass, drug and weapon possession, dealing with proceeds of crime and traffic offences.[19][20]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Finks Motorcycle Club (Finks MC) is an Australian one-percenter founded in , , in 1969. The club emphasizes motorcycle riding, social brotherhood, and strict loyalty among members, operating with a hierarchical structure typical of such organizations, including prospects advancing to full patched membership after demonstrating commitment. It has expanded from its origins to establish chapters in multiple Australian states, engaging in group rides, club events, and maintaining a culture of privacy that limits public disclosure of internal affairs. Despite its focus on bikie camaraderie, the Finks MC has been designated a criminal under Australian anti-association laws in several jurisdictions, prompting restrictions on member gatherings and movements justified by authorities as necessary to curb public safety risks. However, an analysis of data submitted to the reveals insufficient evidence to classify the club's Gold Coast chapter as a structured group, with criminal incidents often involving individual members rather than coordinated club-directed enterprise. This scholarly examination underscores a disconnect between presumptive legal labeling and empirical indicators of organized criminality, such as profit-driven hierarchies or systemic orchestration. The club's notoriety stems partly from inter-club rivalries and isolated member convictions, yet it persists as a symbol of defiant amid ongoing regulatory pressures.

History

Founding in Adelaide

The Finks Motorcycle Club was established in , , in 1969 as an . The club's name derives from the American comic strip , particularly the line "The king is a fink," reflecting a deliberate choice to evoke irreverence and defiance characteristic of early biker nomenclature. Formed amid the growing Australian motorcycle subculture in the late , the Finks drew from influences like American one-percenter clubs, emphasizing loyalty, riding, and separation from mainstream . Specific founders or initial membership numbers remain undocumented in , with early activities centered on club formation and local riding in Adelaide's industrial and suburban areas. By its inception, the club adopted colors and patches symbolizing its identity, setting the stage for expansion beyond .

Expansion Across Australia

The Finks Motorcycle Club, established in , , in 1969, extended its operations beyond its founding state during the late 20th and early 21st centuries, forming chapters in , Victoria, , and . This growth aligned with broader patterns among Australian outlaw motorcycle clubs, where territorial expansion often involved recruiting local riders and absorbing dissident members from rival groups to consolidate influence in new regions. By the early , the chapter, centered on the Gold Coast, had become a focal point for the club's activities, with historical records indicating sustained operations there amid involvement in . In , the Finks participated in the formation of the United Motorcycle Council in April 2009 alongside other clubs like the , signaling an organized presence in the state by that period. Victoria's chapter similarly developed, bolstered by interstate transfers such as the arrival of South Australian enforcer Mick MacPherson in , which reinforced local operations despite periodic setbacks from pressures. The chapter, particularly in Perth, emerged through high-profile defections, including former member Troy Mercanti, establishing a foothold by the early . This multi-state footprint peaked around , prior to significant defections to the , which absorbed up to 90 percent of Finks members nationally amid legal challenges declaring the Finks a criminal organization in .

Evolution in the 21st Century

In the early 2000s, the Finks Motorcycle Club faced escalating scrutiny and conflict with Australian law enforcement amid broader concerns over outlaw motorcycle gang activities, including involvement in a late-2000s confrontation with police described as an "all-out war." This period saw intensified government responses, such as South Australian police issuing anti-consorting notices to every club member in December 2009, prohibiting association with fellow members for specified periods under newly enacted legislation targeting bikie associations. Similar measures, including declarations of the club as a criminal organization in some jurisdictions, prompted legal challenges; in 2010, the High Court of Australia upheld a South Australian Supreme Court ruling in favor of the Finks, limiting the scope of such designations. By the early 2010s, internal pressures and external crackdowns contributed to a significant restructuring, with approximately 90% of Finks members nationwide patching over to the United States-based Mongols Motorcycle Club in October 2013, a move insiders attributed to restoring core values, reducing criminality and drug use, and ensuring survival amid declining membership and enforcement actions. This transition occurred across states, including a confirmed patch-over of the Western Australia chapter by the Mongols. However, not all members integrated fully, leading to ongoing tensions; by June 2021, a turf war erupted between residual Finks elements and the Mongols in southeast Queensland, involving daylight assaults and property damage. Despite these shifts, Finks-affiliated groups persisted into the 2020s, adapting to anti-association laws through infiltration of legitimate sectors like construction and security; for instance, in August 2025, companies linked to Finks leader Ali Bilal secured contracts for services on Nauru, while the club exploited regulatory gaps in the Australian Capital Territory to expand influence. Law enforcement continued operations against them, including July 2025 raids in Sydney yielding charges against three members for firearms and drug offenses tied to road rage incidents. A 2017 internal government review concluded that anti-bikie laws enacted post-2000s violence had proven ineffective in curbing gang operations, recommending their abolition due to adaptation by clubs like the Finks. Recent inter-gang rivalries, such as a 2025 recruitment and arson dispute with the Comancheros in Melbourne, underscored the club's enduring presence amid calls for renewed consorting measures following public brawls.

Organizational Structure

Chapters and Geographic Presence

The Finks Motorcycle Club established its founding chapter in , , in 1969, serving as the original base for its operations. Expansion occurred across , with chapters forming in , including the Gold Coast chapter, which was declared a criminal organization under Queensland law on June 1, 2012. Additional chapters emerged in , notably Perth, and in Victoria, where a clubhouse in Cranbourne West was raided by police in 2019 amid investigations into . In late 2013, the Perth chapter and the majority of other Australian chapters patched over to the , integrating Finks members into the larger organization and diminishing the independent Finks presence domestically. Despite this merger, isolated Finks activities persisted, such as a motorcycle run from to Cranbourne in Victoria in January 2023, indicating limited ongoing operations in that state. Internationally, the Finks attempted to establish a chapter in the United States in 2013 but achieved no sustained presence. In 2021, the club formed a chapter in following the of Australian members under visa cancellation policies, marking its primary extraterritorial expansion. No verified chapters exist outside and as of recent reports.

Internal Hierarchy and Rules

The Finks Motorcycle Club maintains a relatively flat organizational compared to many other outlaw motorcycle gangs, eschewing traditional titles such as president or in favor of a comprising four elected members per chapter. These members handle chapter collectively, with decisions subject to chapter-wide voting. Specific functional roles include a responsible for recording and disseminating meeting minutes and run details, a managing finances and providing statements, and a sergeant-at-arms tasked with enforcing order and by-laws during club activities. This structure, documented in club rules disclosed during a 2012 Supreme Court proceeding where authorities sought to classify the Gold Coast chapter as a criminal , emphasizes over centralized . Club rules, as revealed in the same 2012 legal disclosure, impose strict requirements for membership progression and conduct to preserve exclusivity and loyalty. Prospective members must first complete an interstate run, secure nomination and seconding from existing chapter members, attend all meetings, runs, and functions, and own a roadworthy of at least 650cc displacement—limited to British or American models, excluding two-strokes—before receiving probationary status via a 75% chapter vote. This is followed by a 12-month nominee period and a subsequent 12-month probationary trial, during which full patch members earn the right to club tattoos; nominees and probationaries are prohibited from such markings. Women are explicitly barred from membership and from wearing club insignia or accessing internal business. Disciplinary measures enforce attendance and equipment standards, with voting privileges revoked after missing one major run or going three months without a qualifying , requiring a show-cause defense after two missed runs or potential expulsion after three. Membership lapses entirely after six months without a bike, and expelled members face permanent bars to reinstatement without unanimous chapter approval. Club colors—patches and —are treated as communal property, not to be altered, worn in vehicles, or retained upon departure, with retrieval enforced. Chapters convene fortnightly, sharing minutes across the network, while dues vary by chapter; interstate transfers require nomination, and patch retention is capped at 15 years for relocating members, though voting rights persist. These provisions, consistent across disclosures, prioritize operational discipline and territorial cohesion.

Culture and Membership

Recruitment and Initiation

Recruitment into the Finks Motorcycle Club typically begins through existing social networks, where potential members, often known as "hangarounds," associate informally with club members at bars, events, or rides before formal consideration. This phase allows clubs to observe and compatibility, with screening emphasizing reliability, criminal , and absence of affiliations with rival groups or . Australian motorcycle clubs like the Finks prioritize recruits from personal connections to mitigate infiltration risks, as evidenced by interviews with former members indicating that outsiders rarely succeed without introductions. Prospective members advance to "nominee" status— the Australian equivalent of a prospect period—after demonstrating commitment, which can last several months to years and involves performing menial tasks, attending mandatory meetings and runs, and proving unwavering obedience. For the Finks, nominees must own a road-legal motorcycle of at least 650cc (excluding two-strokes) and complete at least one interstate club run before nomination by existing members. Advancement requires unanimous chapter approval, often following a seconding by senior members, with failure to attend events or fulfill duties resulting in dismissal. Initiation to full patched membership culminates in a club vote, where nominees receive the club's colors (patches) symbolizing acceptance into the brotherhood, contingent on sustained demonstrations of amid the rigors designed to filter out unreliables. This process, rooted in vetting for criminal propensity and group cohesion, aligns with broader motorcycle gang practices that favor recruits predisposed to the club's hierarchical and sometimes illicit dynamics, as former members reported joining for camaraderie, identity, and perceived protection. Specific rituals beyond patching are not publicly detailed for the Finks, though general club initiations emphasize endurance tests and oaths of allegiance to enforce internal discipline.

Lifestyle and Brotherhood Emphasis

The Finks Motorcycle Club emphasizes a strong sense of brotherhood and as foundational elements of its , with members describing the organization as a family-like network providing mutual support and camaraderie. This bond is cultivated through shared rituals, such as group motorcycle rides and social gatherings, which reinforce collective identity and commitment among patched members. Prospective members undergo a rigorous initiation process, often lasting years, involving subservient roles and demonstrations of unwavering dedication to prove their worthiness for full membership. Strict internal rules govern conduct, prohibiting actions that could compromise the group's secrecy or unity, such as unauthorized disclosure of club matters or disloyalty to fellow members. These protocols aim to maintain cohesion but have been critiqued in legal analyses as mechanisms that insulate the club from external scrutiny. The club's lifestyle traditionally revolves around motorcycle enthusiasm, with regular runs and events serving as outlets for hypermasculine expression and group solidarity, though anti-association laws introduced in from 2012 onward have curtailed public activities and altered daily operations. Members have expressed frustration over these restrictions, viewing them as erosions of the core that defines the Finks, shifting focus from open brotherhood displays to more insular practices. Empirical studies of former motorcycle gang affiliates highlight that while criminal elements attract some, the allure of enduring and a structured "outlaw" identity remains a primary draw for retention.

Activities and Operations

Motorcycle Events and Rallies

The Finks Motorcycle Club organizes annual national runs as central events, involving coordinated group rides by members from chapters across to foster club solidarity and demonstrate riding prowess. These rallies typically feature hundreds of participants traveling significant distances on highways, often ending at a host chapter's clubhouse for gatherings that emphasize the club's outlaw motorcycle culture. In January 2023, approximately 200 to 300 Finks members assembled in , near the New South Wales-Victoria border, to launch the club's annual national run, covering 350 kilometers to the Cranbourne clubhouse in southeastern . The event proceeded despite issuing public warnings and heightened surveillance under state anti-bikie laws, with riders adhering to road rules during the journey but facing post-event scrutiny for potential association violations. Preceding runs include the 2022 national event, similarly focused on interstate convergence and club documentation via videos, and a 2024 national run that drew participants nationwide, as previewed and later showcased in club media highlighting route traversal and group dynamics. Such rallies trace back to the club's earlier history, with records of social events like the 1970 New Year's Eve party in Adelaide incorporating motorcycle elements, though modern iterations prioritize large-scale, multi-state mobility. These activities align with broader outlaw motorcycle club traditions of "runs" for maintenance of internal bonds, distinct from public charity rides, and often occur amid legal restrictions in jurisdictions like Victoria and New South Wales.

Business and Economic Involvement

Members of the Finks Motorcycle Club have established and controlled enterprises in sectors such as labour hire, security services, and construction subcontracting, often leveraging the club's network for operational expansion. Finks world president Ali Bilal founded Safe Hands Group in 2020 as a labour-hire firm, which supplies workers to construction projects, including those funded by the Australian Capital Territory government, such as the London Circuit enabling works for light rail expansion. Bilal also controls Black Dog Group Services, which provides security personnel and has secured contracts with a Nauru government agency for escort services on the island since at least February 2025. These operations are based in , where anti-association laws are less stringent compared to other Australian jurisdictions, enabling the club to use the location as a base for infiltrating competitive industries like . In , where the Finks originated, police assessments indicate that approximately 80% of Adelaide's nightclubs and bars rely on security firms owned or staffed by outlaw motorcycle gang members, including Finks affiliates, reflecting broader economic penetration into hospitality protection services. Such involvement allows club members to generate revenue through legitimate channels while maintaining influence over local markets, though authorities have raised concerns about potential via these entities.

Anti-Bikie Legislation in

Anti-bikie legislation in emerged primarily in the late as state governments responded to concerns over outlaw motorcycle clubs' alleged involvement in , including violence and drug trafficking, by enacting laws to declare such groups criminal organizations and impose restrictions on members' associations. These measures, often justified by police intelligence on clubs like the Finks Motorcycle Club, included provisions for control orders prohibiting gatherings, bans on displaying club insignia, consorting laws limiting interactions with other members, and mandatory minimum sentences for related offenses. In , the Criminal Law (Criminal Organisations Disruption) Amendment Act 2009 enabled the declaration of specific clubs as criminal organizations, with the Finks' Gold Coast chapter targeted under this framework, leading to applications by police to restrict members' freedoms. The legislation faced criticism for potentially infringing on freedoms of association, prompting multiple challenges by Finks members. South Australia pioneered such laws with the Serious and Organised Crime (Control) Act 2008, under which the Finks became the state's first declared criminal organization on May 14, 2009, allowing control orders against members to prevent meetings with suspected criminals. However, the Magistrates Court ruled these control order provisions invalid on September 25, 2009, dismissing orders against seven Finks members on the grounds that the laws failed to adequately link individual actions to organizational criminality. Despite this setback, expanded declarations in 2015 under amended laws, listing the Finks among 27 outlaw motorcycle clubs as criminal organizations, enabling asset freezes and further restrictions. In , the Finks challenged the 2009 laws' validity, securing special leave in October 2012 to argue overreach, but the court upheld the framework in related cases, affirming declarations against chapters based on evidence of collective criminal purpose. Subsequent Queensland reforms, including the Vicious Lawless Association of Criminals Miscellaneous Provisions Act 2013 passed on October 16, 2013, intensified measures with bipartisan support, introducing offenses for associating in public groups of more than two declared members and enhancing police powers for raids and denials. The Finks' efforts to contest these, including a 2014 bid, were largely unsuccessful, with the court rejecting challenges that equated the laws to bills of by distinguishing them as targeted disruptions of proven criminal associations rather than guilt by membership alone. These laws have resulted in numerous prosecutions and clubhouse closures for Finks members, though empirical evaluations indicate mixed impacts on overall rates, with critics arguing they prioritize symbolic enforcement over addressing underlying causal factors like drug markets.

Declarations as Criminal Organizations

In , the Finks Motorcycle Club was declared an outlaw organization on May 13, 2009, under the Serious and Organised Crime (Control) Act 2008, marking the first such declaration against a in the state; this applied to the club itself and 48 identified members or former members, enabling the issuance of control orders that prohibited association with other members or suspected serious criminals. Subsequent control orders were served on Finks members in December 2009, based on police assessments that the club posed a risk to public safety and order. In June 2015, the Finks were among ten s explicitly declared criminal organizations under amended state regulations, expanding prohibitions on membership, association, and related activities to combat . In , police applied in June 2012 to declare the Gold Coast chapter of the Finks a criminal organization under the Vicious Lawless Association Disestablishment Act 2013, citing involvement in ; this declaration, which banned members from associating, was upheld by the on March 14, 2013, despite challenges from club members arguing it infringed on . The ruling affirmed the law's validity but prompted ongoing legal resistance from the club, including appeals and name changes by some members to evade restrictions. These state-level declarations, driven by law enforcement evidence of the club's links to and , have facilitated asset freezes, clubhouse closures, and membership disclosures, though critics, including academic analyses, contend that such blanket designations may overreach by treating clubs as inherently criminal rather than targeting individual offenses. No federal declaration exists, with actions confined to jurisdictions like and where anti-association laws were enacted post-2008 to address bikie-related public safety threats.

Criminal Allegations and Investigations

Numerous law enforcement operations in have resulted in charges against individuals associated with the Finks Motorcycle Club for drug trafficking and possession, often involving , , and other substances. Australian police agencies, including the New South Wales Raptor Squad and , have publicly linked Finks associates to syndicates distributing drugs across state borders, citing seizures of significant quantities as evidence of organized involvement. In July 2025, Police conducted raids in Western Sydney targeting alleged Finks members, arresting three men aged 32, 36, and 38, and seizing , firearms, and other drugs; the suspects faced charges including drug supply and prohibited weapons possession. Earlier, in September 2023, a former senior Finks member in was charged in connection with a $30 million importation from , adding to prior trafficking offenses against him. In June 2023, three alleged patched Finks members in Victoria were arrested and charged with drug trafficking alongside , following investigations into activities. Historical cases include a 2021 Queensland arrest of a Finks member charged with trafficking dangerous drugs and unlawfully supplying firearms. In 2017, New South Wales Police dismantled a drug syndicate in Wagga Wagga linked to the Finks, arresting 13 individuals on charges of drug supply, with seizures including methamphetamine and weapons. A 2014 federal operation uncovered an international methamphetamine distribution network allegedly led by South Australian Finks and Rebels members, resulting in multiple arrests. Earlier raids, such as those in 2011 on Queensland's Gold Coast, netted two Finks members and 12 associates on drug-related charges. Some charges have led to convictions, such as a 2010 South Australian case where Finks member William John Davis received a three-year sentence for possessing illegal drugs and military-style weapons. In 2009, three Finks members in New South Wales faced drug trafficking charges in court, with concerns raised over witness safety. Law enforcement maintains that such activities form a core revenue stream for outlaw motorcycle gangs like the Finks, though club representatives have denied organized involvement, attributing incidents to individual actions.

Violence and Rival Club Conflicts

The Finks Motorcycle Club has participated in numerous violent confrontations with rival outlaw motorcycle gangs, primarily driven by territorial control, personal vendettas, and competition for members. These incidents, concentrated in , have involved brawls, shootings, and retaliatory attacks, resulting in injuries, deaths, and legal repercussions for participants. attributes much of the violence to the clubs' hierarchical structures and codes of retaliation, though club members often frame such acts as defensive responses to provocations. A prominent rivalry exists with the , escalating in the mid-2000s. In March 2006, a brawl dubbed the "Ballroom Blitz" erupted at Queensland's Royal Pines Resort between Finks and members, featuring shootings and stabbings that led to the conviction of Finks member Shane Scott Bowden, who received a 6.5-year sentence for his role. The feud intensified in , where in September 2011, armed intruders shot an 11-year-old boy—the son of Finks associate Mark Sandery—twice in the leg during a in , prompting the Finks to offer a $500,000 reward for information on the perpetrators. Retaliation followed in November 2012, when associates from the "North Crew" targeted a Finks-linked site but instead fatally shot Jason De Ieso, an uninvolved , at with a sawn-off shotgun in his Pooraka workshop; prosecutors described the attack as swift retribution for a prior assault on a member's home, charging eight men with murder. Conflicts with the Coffin Cheaters, simmering since at least 2008 over the expulsion and defection of figure Troy Mercanti to the Finks, boiled over in October 2010 at Perth Motorplex. A mass brawl involving around 20 participants began after a Finks member spat at a member during a event, hospitalizing three Finks—one with a thigh , another with three severed fingers, and all with —though police assessed it as isolated rather than indicative of broader war. In 2013, members admitted to misleading Western Australia's Corruption and Crime Commission about details of . Tensions with the Comancheros have manifested in recruitment battles and indirect violence, particularly in Victoria. By mid-2025, a power struggle saw Finks allegedly "patching over" Comancheros members, fueling a wave of arsons causing millions in damages to suburban businesses and a Comanchero clubhouse firebombing in Clyde North. Related 2019 incidents included the shooting of Finks member Sione Hokafonu outside a Fountain Gate hotel and the near-fatal shooting of Mongol associate Rocco Curra, alongside the ambush killing of Paul Virgona, amid overlapping gang animosities. Separately, in 2012, Finks member Mark James Graham fired at a Bandido and an innocent bystander during a Gold Coast shopping centre standoff, earning a 12-year-and-3-month prison term. These episodes underscore patterns of escalation, where initial disputes frequently provoke disproportionate responses, as documented in analyses of outlaw motorcycle gang dynamics.

Notable Incidents and Arrests

Key Historical Confrontations

The Finks Motorcycle Club's conflict with the originated in around 2008, following internal splits and the defection of key members, including former Coffin Cheaters sergeant-at-arms Troy Mercanti to the Finks. Tensions escalated into open violence by October 2010, when a brawl erupted at the Kwinana Motorplex during a speedway event, involving members of both clubs and leading to charges against Finks members for and weapons possession. The continued with sporadic assaults and property damage, culminating in a formal declaration of war in 2018 that prompted firebombings, drive-by shootings, and a severe bashing of three Finks members—one shot in the thigh, another suffering three severed fingers, and all sustaining head injuries—hospitalizing them after a clash in Perth. A prolonged rivalry with the Hells Angels unfolded across multiple states, marked by the 2006 "Ballroom Blitz" brawl at a Queensland fight event, where Finks and Hells Angels members engaged in a large-scale melee involving weapons, injuring several participants and highlighting territorial disputes on the Gold Coast. This animosity intensified in 2012 with the murder of Jason De Ieso, an innocent bystander in Adelaide's Pooraka suburb, who was fatally shot during a targeted hit linked to retaliatory strikes in the Finks-Hells Angels feud; seven Hells Angels associates were later convicted (though convictions were overturned in 2025 pending retrial), underscoring the clubs' willingness to use lethal force over perceived slights. The conflict peaked again in September 2013 at the Broadbeach United Sports Club on the Gold Coast, where dozens of Finks and Hells Angels clashed in a public brawl with knives, firearms, and improvised weapons, resulting in multiple stabbings and shootings that injured at least five men and prompted Queensland's introduction of stringent anti-association laws. In the , the Finks entered a bloody turf war with the Nomads starting in late , triggered by the defection of a senior Nomads associate to the Finks, leading to escalating attacks including rammings, , and assaults. By 2018, the violence had involved over a dozen arrests during coordinated police raids, with charges against 13 members from both clubs for directing criminal group activities, weapons offenses, and , as authorities documented a pattern of "open warfare" that disrupted local communities.

Recent Raids and Prosecutions (2010s–2020s)

In March 2017, Police conducted raids in targeting a allegedly linked to the Finks, resulting in multiple arrests for charges including supply, and weapon possession, , , stealing, and participating in a criminal group. On December 29, 2017, two high-ranking Finks members were arrested during an operation in the of , as part of ongoing police efforts against outlaw motorcycle gang activities. In March 2018, a senior Finks member was charged following the discovery of a cache of drugs and weapons during a police search. A 2019 raid on the Finks clubhouse in Melbourne's southeast investigated an , amid broader scrutiny of gang-related violence. On March 4, 2020, arrested four Finks members in coordinated raids across Melbourne's southeast, targeting suspected criminal involvement. In June 2021, three high-ranking Finks members, including a chapter president, vice president, and sergeant-at-arms, were arrested and charged with extortion-related offenses following raids in . During National Days of Action in November 2023, Australian police executed 12 search warrants and arrested 25 individuals associated with the Finks and gangs, seizing approximately $200,000 in cash alongside drugs and weapons. On January 13, 2024, the Australian Federal Police arrested five males linked to the Finks in connection with a series of attacks over three weeks, as part of investigations into organized criminal activity. In September 2024, seven Finks members, including senior office-bearers, were charged in Victoria for riding in formation along the Southbank Promenade footpath, violating public order laws. Raptor Squad operations in intensified in 2025: On March 13, five high-ranking Finks members and associates were charged following an alleged attempted aggravated break and enter. In June, ACT police identified five Finks members involved in a Braddon brawl, leading to further scrutiny under Taskforce . On 1-2, three men with Finks links were charged in Western Sydney raids, with seizures of , , and other drugs. On October 3, another Finks associate was charged with offenses during a targeted day of action. These actions reflect sustained focus on Finks-associated drug trafficking, weapons possession, and violent crimes, often under anti-association legislation.

Perspectives and Debates

Club's Self-Defense Against Stereotypes

Members of the Finks Motorcycle Club have contested characterizations of the group as a criminal organization, arguing that media and law enforcement narratives overstate their criminal involvement while ignoring comparable misconduct in other institutions. In an August 5, 2009, speech at the National Press Club in Canberra, club member "Ferret" cited criminologist Paul Wilson to claim that bikie-related offenses accounted for just 0.3% of total Australian crime, adding, "I'm not trying to say all bikers are saints, just like not all politicians or police are squeaky clean." Ferret further asserted that "there is more organised criminal activity every day in Australia's governments and police services than you would find at your local biker clubhouse," referencing political corruption scandals to argue against blanket criminal designations based on isolated actions. He criticized control orders imposed on nine Finks members in [South Australia](/page/South Australia), noting that two had no prior convictions and questioning reliance on undisclosed police intelligence. Club representatives have portrayed the Finks as misunderstood enthusiasts rather than a monolithic criminal entity, emphasizing that members are "just a group of guys who sometimes end up in trouble with the law." This self-view is symbolized by their non-threatening logo, which contrasts with more aggressive emblems used by other groups. Through public , including Ferret's campaigns against anti-association laws, the club has framed such legislation as draconian overreach that infringes on and unfairly stigmatizes lawful motorcycling without .

Law Enforcement and Media Narratives

Australian agencies have consistently classified the Finks Motorcycle Club as an motorcycle gang (OMCG) engaged in , citing involvement in production and distribution, illicit trafficking, and violent offenses. In , the club was formally declared a criminal under anti-association laws on May 14, 2009, enabling restrictions on membership and activities based on evidence of serious criminal conduct. Police sought similar declarations for the Gold Coast chapter in June 2012, arguing the group posed a to public safety through patterned criminality. These designations have facilitated targeted operations, including NSW's Raptor Squad raids in July 2025, which charged three associates with drug and offenses after seizing and weapons. Similar actions in October 2025 led to charges against another member. Ongoing police intelligence portrays the Finks as expansionist and prone to inter-gang conflicts, with operations linking members to , , and shootings; for instance, five members faced charges in March 2025 over a violent attack, while a 2017 Riverina raid dismantled a tied to the club, yielding guns and narcotics. and state forces emphasize proactive disruption, as seen in a January 2024 of five Finks-linked individuals for multiple arsons. Enforcement narratives frame OMCGs like the Finks as prioritizing loyalty over law, enabling entrenched criminal enterprises rather than mere social clubs. Media coverage in Australia reinforces law enforcement's depiction of the Finks as a "notorious" threat, often highlighting raids and violence to underscore public safety risks; reports of their Canberra expansion in recent years prompted warnings of heightened policing vigilance. Outlets like Herald Sun and 7NEWS have detailed recruitment wars and firebombings linked to Finks-Comanchero rivalries, portraying the club as fueling suburban chaos with millions in damages. Coverage of a February 2024 member's death escalated fears of "gangland war," aligning with police assessments of escalating tensions. While factual reporting on arrests dominates, sensational elements—such as tying the club to international security deals or Bali gatherings disrupted by authorities—amplify perceptions of omnipresent danger, drawing from official briefings without independent verification of broader organizational guilt. This portrayal contrasts with empirical challenges to blanket declarations, though media rarely foregrounds acquittals or non-criminal member activities.

References

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