Hakan Ayik, her most wanted man Australia, was arrested in Turkey. Ayik, a former member of Sydney’s Comanchero biker gang, had been wanted by Australian authorities since 2010. His arrest, along with other known gang members including Baris Tukel, Erkan Dogan and Sibel Arif, was reported by Turkish news website SonDakika.com. .
They participated in the arrests heavily armed police officers and a significant amount of cash was allegedly seized. The Turkish website said a total of 37 people were arrested. Turkish Interior Minister Ali Gerlikaya announced that approximately $161 million in assets were seized during the raid. “The leaders gangs, together with managers and members of Turkish citizens’ organizations, as well as members of foreign national organizations, come to our country, continue their criminal activities and try to deliver the drugs procured from South America to Australia, the Netherlands and Hong Kong, through South Korea and South Africa. It was found that they are trying to launder the proceeds they got from crimes in our country“, his statement said.
Ayik was wanted on an Interpol red notice by authorities in both Australia and the United States. Known as ‘Big Hux’ or the ‘Facebook Gangster’, he allegedly became a major drug importer while living in exile in Turkey and had undergone plastic surgery to alter his appearance, according to the New York Post. The arrest by the Turkish authorities is considered one of the most important in the history of the country’s underworld.
Australia’s most wanted man, Hakan Ayik, arrested in Turkey https://t.co/D2mul2Sd19 pic.twitter.com/VFub1si22U
— New York Post (@nypost) November 3, 2023
THE Australian Federal Police (AFP) acknowledged the efforts of the Turkish National Police to track down international organized criminals. Despite the major arrests, it is unlikely that Ayik, whose fortune is estimated at around $515 million, will be extradited to Australia because of his Turkish citizenship.
“Turkey is a regional leader in the global fight against international organized crime,” the AFP statement said, adding that it had seen the determination of the Turkish National Police “to arrest alleged organized crime figures” and said it was providing support to the Turkish National Police. Police through Operation Gain in Ankara.
Source: News Beast

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