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Bikie killer warned: Come forward or you'll be killed

April 23, 2006


HE was a gifted student, a talented sportsman, a privileged member of one of the country's finest universities.

But now Russell Oldham is a man on the run, wanted by police for the execution-style killing of a mate, and hunted by bikies seeking to avenge the brutal murder.

Yesterday - two days after Bandido motorcycle gang chapter president Rodney Monk was gunned down outside a Sydney restaurant - the whereabouts of 39-year-old Oldham remained unknown.

But police insiders said it was unlikely the gunman - himself a Bandido bikie and former sergeant-at-arms - would have his liberty for long.

"He'll either come forward because he's worried he'll end up in a hole in the ground, or that's where he'll actually end up," one veteran investigator said.

"You usually don't kill someone that high up and get away with it."

It is believed a dispute over Oldham's relationship with a woman led to the attack, outside Bar Reggio - where the two men had dined together - in East Sydney's popular restaurant strip on Thursday night.

Kings Cross police yesterday announced Strike Force Coombah to investigate the slaying of Monk, the younger brother of Sydney detective Inspector Brad Monk.

But they maintained they were confident of making an arrest shortly.

"It is something that we can't dismiss," Superintendent Mark Murdoch said of the possibility of a revenge strike, presumably against Oldham.

"[But] we are confident that we will be able to locate this fellow fairly quickly and put an end to the matter."

Those who knew Oldham from his days at Sydney University were left wondering yesterday what went wrong.

As a young man he harboured an interest in astronomy, which motivated him to begin a science degree at Sydney University in 1985. The following year he changed to the Faculty of Medicine but failed to complete the course.

In 1987, he deferred his studies and took up a job in the security industry, where, it's said, he progressed quickly to a senior position before again trying unsuccessfully to resume study in 1989.

During his time at university, he was a student of St John's College, the tradition-steeped, Catholic residential college which counts Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott and Federal Human Services Minister Joe Hockey among its old boys.

And he proved himself a talented sportsman. He played with Sydney University Cricket Club for several seasons, including a stint in the club's U21 Poidevin-Gray team, when he was coached by former Test spinner turned commentator Kerry O'Keefe.

"At the age of 21 he was already a massive guy, about 6 feet 4 inches [193 centimetres]," one club member remembered yesterday. "He was not your average Sydney Uni cricketer - there was obviously something very worldly about him."

After Oldham left university and cricket behind, it seems his life took a bad turn. In 1998 he was jailed for five years over the manslaughter of two men at Bankstown.

Prior to the double killing, over which well known Sydney criminal identity Arben "Benny" Puta was also sent away, Oldham had been convicted of both drug and firearms offences dating back to 1994.

 

The death of a brother in arms

Bandido Rodney Monk with Amber Petty, the bridesmaid of Princess Mary, at a Christmas Party in the Palace Hotel, Darlinghurst, last December. Ms Petty has since described the photo as a mistake, saying she did not know who she was pictured with. She went out with Mark Alexander-Erber, the owner of the Pubboy hotels.
Photo: James Brickwood

By Les Kennedy and Kate McClymont
April 22, 2006
INTERNAL warfare in the Bandidos bike gang - and a dispute over an affair one of its members had with a female parole officer - were catalysts for a killing outside a Sydney restaurant strip, police believe.

Police have named Russell Merrick Oldham, 39, as their chief suspect in Thursday night's shooting of the gang's chapter president, Rodney "Hooks" Monk, in Little Italy in East Sydney. They warned the public not to approach Oldham, saying he was armed and extremely dangerous.

Oldham is the Bandidos' former sergeant-at-arms. He had been a student at Sydney University, in science then in medicine, in the 1980s but eventually dropped out to become a security guard. He has a passion for astronomy and a history of violence.

He lost his post when he went to jail for five years for the manslaughter of two men at Bankstown in 1998, a post Monk, 32, was later to fill. Monk is the brother of senior police officer Detective Inspector Brad Monk.

Police believe the two Bandidos had been arguing about Oldham's relationship with his parole officer - against club rules.

The dinner at Bar Reggio on Thursday was to have been a farewell supper for Oldham. Police believe Monk, who was on bail for driving offences, told him he could no longer wear the gang's black, red and gold colours of a bandit brandishing a machete and pistol. They also believe that when Monk told him he could no longer ride with the gang the two men began shouting at each other.

Oldham, Monk and several other Bandidos entered the crowded restaurant about 9pm, taking a table at the back. It is not known whether Monk had taken his bodyguard, Raymond Curry, who was also jailed over the Bankstown killings.

Superintendent Mark Murdoch said Monk asked Oldham to step outside so they "could continue their discussion".

Monk was unarmed, and police suspect Oldham was carrying a firearm in a small black handbag. No one in the restaurant heard a thing, but neighbours say they heard at least three shots. Then two men ran into Reggios and said a man had been shot at the corner of nearby Chapel and Riley streets.

At 9.15pm police, who were on an undercover sting in neighbouring suburbs, arrived and found Monk sprawled on the ground with two gunshot wounds. He had been shot in the head by a heavy calibre semi-automatic pistol.

Superintendent Murdoch said a man was seen running from the body towards the nearby Lord Roberts Hotel, where he hailed a taxi. At Sydney Town Hall the same man abandoned the taxi and ran off, possibly to Town Hall station.

"Witnesses tell us there was more than one shot," he said. "What we have been told is the deceased and another man had a conversation. The conversation became heated and the two went outside to discuss their differences. We believe we have a good idea who we are looking for … That man has links to the Bandido outlaw motorcycle gang."

Tensions had been simmering within the Bandidos since it had stripped Monk's predecessor, Felix Lyle, of his colours after a dispute over the gang's finances and an alleged assault of a gang member. Matters reached fever pitch when Lyle's 24-year-old son, Dallas Fitzgerald, was kidnapped.

The Herald understands he was released on the payment of a large sum of money and the promise of a further $2 million. Suspicion first fell on a rival gang, the Nomads, but the Bandidos now suspect the job was carried out by some of their own. The resulting dispute threatened Monk's presidency, and it was against this backdrop that Oldham came out in support of Lyle.

Superintendent Murdoch said police had met Bandidos officials yesterday amid concerns of revenge attacks. "It is something that we can't dismiss … We have put plans in place to minimise the impact of that retribution."

Although the gang had given police no promises, "they certainly appreciate what we are trying to do".

"We are confident that we will be able to locate this fellow fairly quickly and put an end to the matter," he said.

Superintendent Murdoch said there had been some discussion that "the person we are looking for was obviously upset with some decisions that had been made by the hierarchy of the Bandidos … It is our understanding they were meeting to resolve those issues, but obviously that didn't occur."

Monk's brother, Inspector Monk, who is Redfern police crime manager, was in shock last night at the news of the shooting. Police said there was no suggestion he was involved in the Bandidos.

 

 

 

 

Road Scholars~

Executed: bikie who partied with royal best mate
Fri Apr 21, 2006 12:52pm
4.154.96.244

 
Executed: bikie who partied with royal best mate

By KARA LAWRENCE Police Reporter

April 22, 2006

THE president of the "downtown chapter" of the Bandidos outlaw motorcycle gang was gunned down by one of his own members.

Police were last night hunting a member of the chapter, which was headed by Rodney Monk, 31.

Monk, from Tamarama, was executed in East Sydney on Thursday night.

Police have warned the club not to engage in retribution.

The shooting suspect, described as a man in his late 30s, is not an office-bearer within the chapter, which has about 20 members.

Sources told The Saturday Daily Telegraph there had been internal feuding within the chapter recently.

Although Monk, nicknamed "Hooksy", was the chapter's most senior officer, there had been a rift within the membership over his leadership.

"It's a power struggle," said one source, who did not wish to be named.

"Some of the older blokes are not happy with the new style of leadership."

Monk had been with several other bikies, including his attacker, at an East Sydney Italian restaurant, Bar Reggio.

The meeting was an attempt to solve the dispute.

Shortly before 9.15pm the two men, both believed to be armed, left the restaurant following a heated argument.

Monk's body, with a gunshot wound to the head, was found lying in a laneway off Riley St.

Witnesses in nearby Stanley St saw the suspect run from the murder scene and flag down a taxi, which he caught to Town Hall railway station.

The taxi was later seized by police for forensic tests.

The chapter had recently taken over an old printing premises on Parramatta Rd, Leichhardt and had almost finished renovating it for their new clubhouse.

Renovations on the high security clubhouse, complete with intercom and CCTV cameras on its front and back entrances, began about six months ago.

The chapter has previously had business links to a well-known Sydney organised crime family.

Through this family it became involved in Sydney's nightclub security industry.

The chapter's former clubhouse, in Harris St, Pyrmont, was raided about four years ago by gang squad officers targeting drug supply in the Parramatta area, resulting in several arrests.

At the time, the club's president was Felix Lyle, but he lost the presidency and parted ways with the chapter two months ago.


http://dailytelegraph.news.com.au/story/0,20281,18886873-5001021,00.html

 

 


Man killed as bikie war flares


Email Print Normal font Large font Sealed off … a blue tarpaulin covers the murder scene in East Sydney last night.
Photo: Andrew Meares
By Les Kennedy and Kirsty Needham
April 21, 2006

A MEMBER of the Bandidos bikie gang was gunned down in an East Sydney laneway last night in an apparent continuation of a recent war between rival motorcycle gangs.

The man, understood to be the brother of a serving policeman, died when he was shot in the head in a laneway near the corner of Riley and Stanley streets about 9.15pm.

Superintendent Mark Murdoch, of Kings Cross police, said the man had been dining in a nearby restaurant. He had been seen talking to another man. A short time after he left the restaurant a shot was heard.

The suspected killer fled the scene in a taxi, he said.

"It was very confronting and very unsavoury," Superintendent Murdoch said of the crime scene. "It's a very brazen attack in a very well-patronised area."

He described the murder as "callous and very vicious", adding: "In the middle of Sydney, it's not good."

The murder comes after a series of shootings involving different bikie gangs in recent weeks, including an attack about six weeks ago outside a Pitt Street nightclub. In that incident, an alleged member of the Nomads bikie gang was shot, allegedly by a former member of the Finks.

Superintendent Murdoch said the taxi driver who drove the murder suspect from the scene had been found unharmed.

Taxi drivers had been asked to contact police if they carried a bald man carrying a black bag.

 

Gunned down in city street

By BEN SHARKEY and JAMES PHELPS

April 21, 2006

A MAN was murdered execution-style in full view of restaurant patrons at one of Sydney's trendiest nightspots last night.

The man was shot in the head on Chapel St, near the corner of Riley St, East Sydney, about 9.30pm. Minutes earlier he had finished eating in nearby Bar Reggio, on Crown St, where he had been seen speaking to his killer.

Witnesses said the first police on the scene told them the shooting was a police sting gone wrong. However, police last night denied this, saying they were working on an unrelated investigation.

The bald-headed gunman, who wore brown pants to just below the knee and had a backpack, ran into Stanley St, which was crowded with diners, and jumped into a taxi.

Another taxi driver who was first on the scene said there were two shots five seconds apart. He said: "I walked into the alley after having a coffee. I heard two shots come from about 30m away.

 

"The gunman disappeared but I went to the guy lying on the ground and there was blood all over his face. I rang an ambulance but he looked dead. It was an execution-style murder."

He said the victim had arms covered with tattoos and "looked about 25 to 30, bald headed".

The taxi driver said police arrived just minutes

after the shooting, adding: "I was still on the phone when all these plainclothes officers started turning up."

Although the pair had been inside Bar Reggio, the shooting was best witnessed by diners in popular restaurant Two Chefs on Stanley.

Both were closed and patrons were taken to Kings Cross police station to be interviewed.

A man in Two Chefs said he heard two shots, adding: "A guy in his 50s, who was wearing a backpack and had a gun, ran to Stanley St and got straight into a cab."

A woman interviewed by police about the murder said she was told by an officer it was an operation that "went bad".

Patrons of Bar Reggio said they saw men inside the restaurant with guns before the shooting.

"I saw two men with guns and I got really scared. I asked the owner what was going on and he nodded to say it was all right," said a diner.

"I guessed they were undercover police."

The driver of the taxi in which the gunman fled dropped him at Town Hall train station at 9.57pm.

The shooting comes amid a turf war at Kings Cross between the Hells Angels and Nomads motorcycle gangs.

It is not believed to be linked to a string of recent gun attacks in south-west Sydney's Middle Eastern community.

Superintendent Mark Murdoch said there were about six police in the area at the time of the "callous" shooting. "It is frustrating the man was able to escape," he added.

Police were scouring the area and will scan CCTV from hotels and bars.

Nomads members were also at the scene after the killing. One heavily tattooed man said: "A very dear friend of ours has just passed on."

 

 


 

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