The chequered history of Melbourne gangland figure Sam Abdulrahim
"Were you concerned that this was just a matter of time?"
This was the question asked of Detective Inspector Dean
Thomas on Tuesday as he informed the media of the shooting death of Suleiman
"Sam" Abdulrahim.
In response, Inspector Thomas acknowledged the violent
incidents that clouded the gangland figure's final years.
"I think common sense prevails here, that perhaps
that's the case," he said.
Tuesday's shooting punctuated a years-long period of
violence on Melbourne streets that saw homes subjected to shootings and
businesses firebombed.
And it was the victim of the shooting, a professional boxer
and former Mongols bikie, who served as one of its central figures.
Over a decade of controversy and criminality
A major player in Melbourne's underworld, Sam Abdulrahim had
criminal convictions stemming back to 2009.
Nicknamed "the Punisher", Abdulrahim made media
headlines in February 2015 as one of four men who were arrested following a
wild brawl at the Melbourne Magistrates Court.
A few months later, the then-23-year-old was fronting court
again, this time after being arrested for his role in a deadly car crash in
Reservoir.
Abdulrahim had driven his Ferrari into four other cars on
High Street, killing 88-year-old Muriel Hulett.
He pleaded guilty to culpable driving charges causing death
along with two charges of possession of a drug of dependence.
In 2018, a judge sentenced Abdulrahim to three years and
three months behind bars for his role in the fatal crash, with a non-parole period
of two years.
However, Abdulrahim had already served one year and five
months behind bars and by March of 2019, he was released on parole.
Parole granted, revoked, granted again
By the time Abdulrahim was released from jail on March 5,
2019, he had become a major target.
According to his lawyer at the time, he changed his address
on five occasions for safety reasons, on the advice of Victoria Police.
But within a week of his release, the violence began.
On March 10, assailants conducted a drive-by shooting at a
property on Barrow Street in Brunswick, the same street Abdulrahim had been
paroled to live on.
Two months later, on May 23, Abdulrahim's sister was
targeted as she drove a vehicle that her brother was known to use.
Court documents say two men followed Natali's vehicle before
pulling alongside her and pointing a handgun at her.
Two weeks later on June 7, a house in Campbellfield was
sprayed with bullets. The victims were described by the parole board as
Abdulrahim's cousins.
Abdulrahim said both shootings were completely unrelated to
him and that he had no concerns for his own safety.
But the Adult Parole Board revoked Abdulrahim's parole,
believing him to be the true target of the attacks and a risk to the wider
community.
"The Board has concluded that there is sufficient
information linking you as a likely target of recent shootings, including
10/3/2019 and 7/6/2019, to require cancellation of your parole having regard to
the Board's paramount consideration of the safety and protection of the community,"
the board said in a statement.
Abdularahim was arrested and spent the next 72 days in
detention, nearly half of which was spent in solitary confinement, due to the
Department of Justice and Community Safety's suspicion that he was in danger.
During this period, Abdulrahim was assaulted in prison with
a rock to the back of his head.
But despite the reasoning of the board that the
"benefit to the community of the offender being on parole [was] outweighed
by the risk", Abdulrahim appealed against the decision.
"It's funny that these shootings happened, but I got an
ankle bracelet on my leg … I was nowhere near the shootings, so they locked me
up for no reason," Abdulrahim would later say on a 2022 podcast.
Has Video Duration: 2 minutes 20 seconds.
Watch 2m 20s
He remained in detention until August 23, when a judge found
"the Parole Board had acted beyond its powers in cancelling the
plaintiff's parole", and released Abdulrahim immediately back into the
community.
Violence continues on the outside
The boxer would eventually launch a lawsuit against the
Adult Parole board in 2023, claiming he was "wrongfully and unlawfully
imprisoned, and entitled to damages … for the deprivation of his liberty and
the psychiatric harm".
The lawsuit was dismissed by a judge, who recommended the
attorney-general make an ex-gratia (voluntary) payment to Abdulrahim for the
additional 72 days he spent behind bars.
Abdulrahim completed the rest of his parole without further
incident in May 2020, but the respite from violence would not last long.
In June 2022, as Abdulrahim drove away from a funeral in
Fawkner, gunmen riddled his black Mercedes SUV with bullets.
Abdulrahim was shot four times in the chest and rushed to
hospital in a critical condition, but survived. He claimed a bullet remained
lodged in his kidney following the shooting.
In February 2024, a Thornbury club was firebombed days
before it was due to host a boxing match with Abdulrahim.
Three months later in May, another attempt was made on his
life outside his Thomastown home, with gunmen firing at him 17 times.
Attackers returned weeks later, peppering his home with
bullets in June before firebombing it in August.
The arson attacks continued in October last year, with a
Brunswick gym linked to Abdulrahim firebombed in what authorities believed was
part of Melbourne's illegal tobacco war.
Finally, those hunting Abdulrahim found him.
The final moments of Sam Abdulrahim's life
On Tuesday, the pattern of violence surrounding Abdulrahim
came to a head at the Quest apartments in Preston where he was staying.
It was there that multiple attackers are believed to have
found and killed him, shooting him in the head as he walked towards his car.
A woman, believed to be Abdulrahim's girlfriend, was present
and attempted to save his life with CPR, but the 32-year-old died at the scene.
The assailants escaped in a white Porsche, found burnt out
later in Reservoir, and remain at large.
Sources told the ABC a $1 million bounty had been placed on
Abdulrahim's head by underworld rivals, with police saying Abdulrahim was aware
of the danger he was in.
But Inspector Thomas said offers of police assistance were
not taken up by Abdulrahim.
"We need to be conscious that we believe he's aware
that his life has been at risk and may still have been at risk," he said.
"He was provided with options."
It was an attitude that Abdulrahim appeared to carry
throughout his final years.
When asked by former footballer Sam Newman on a 2022 podcast
about his concerns for his own safety after being shot, Abdulrahim said he
remained unfazed.
"Walking around worried? Nah, not really," he
said.
Comments
Post a Comment