DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » Outlaw bikie gang's Dandenong neighbours refused insurance

Outlaw bikie gang's Dandenong neighbours refused insurance

By Nick Toscano and Dan Oakes

THE owners of factories surrounding an outlaw motorcycle gang’s Dandenong clubhouse are being refused insurance cover after the property was fire-bombed and shot up in separate incidents.

Insurer CHU Underwriting Agencies has told the business owners in the industrial estate that it will not renew the insurance policy – which covers common property and public liability – when it expires on August 25 because the Bandidos clubhouse constitutes a “moral hazard” similar to that presented by brothels and gun shops.

READ:  Bomb explodes at Bandidos’ Dandenong clubhouse

Factory owners at the 22 Dunn Crescent estate were advised of the decision after a bomb exploded outside the clubhouse’s steel-armoured front door on July 25. Earlier in the month, the clubhouse was shot at by someone armed with an AK-47.

The Bandidos and the Hells Angels have been engaged in a simmering feud since the shooting of Bandidos enforcer Toby Mitchell at a Melton industrial estate in March.

Arson and explosives squad Detective Sergeant Lionel Joseph said the explosion had been large enough to smash windows of neighbouring properties.

Owners corporation manager James Parnell, of Binks & Associates, said the cancellation of the insurance policy meant 80 other businesses located on the premises, including manufacturers and mechanics, could be unable to sell their properties and face multimillion-dollar exposure.

“It’s quite concerning for the other members of the owners corporation, namely because they won’t have insurance on their common property,” Mr Parnell said.

“Banks might call in their loans, and there are all those terrible things that go with having no insurance on a mortgaged property.”

Compounded by tough economic times, Mr Parnell said, some businesses at the complex “might be forced to close their doors” as a result. It is understood that two businesses are on the verge of closure.

“Other insurers all have similar exclusions, so we are inviting owners to take their own coverage at the moment in the hope we may get some insurance for public liability on the common grounds, but nothing’s guaranteed,” he said.

The owners corporation has written to the clubhouse owner, believed to be a Bandidos member, requesting that the club vacate the premises, but Mr Parnell has received no reply.

He said the July shooting and bomb blast had been the first incident of violence on the premises, saying the motorcycle club members “generally kept to themselves”.

The attacks on the Bandidos’ Dandenong clubhouse are part of a spate of shootings and fire-bombings at bikie headquarters across Melbourne.

The AK47 attack is believed to have been revenge for an assault on the Hells Angels’ new ‘Darkside’ Seaford chapter, which was shot up in June.

The Bros clubhouse in Yarraville was sprayed with bullets in the early hours on Sunday morning, as part of what is believed to be a feud with a rival bikie gang.

In March, Bandidos serjeant-at-arms Toby Mitchell was shot at a Melton industrial estate during a wild gunfight involving members of a number of clubs affiliated with the Bandidos and the Hells Angels. The estate is home to the clubhouses of the Hells Angels-linked Satan’s Soldiers and Bandidos allies the Diablos.

The shootout led to the declaration of a “war” between the two clubs, and a warning to all Victoria Police members that they should exercise extreme caution when dealing with members of the Bandidos and the Hells Angels.

Two Satan’s Soldiers clubhouses – the Melton property and another in Bendigo – have also been fire-bombed in the months since Mitchell was shot.

The problems at the Dandenong estate are also an indication of the growing influence of outlaw motorcycle gangs in the eastern suburbs. Apart from the Bandidos and the Hells Angels, the Rebels, the Immortals and the Comancheros, the Outlaws and the Coffin Cheasters have a presence in Melbourne’s east.

Digital Editions


  • EPA, Veolia at odds over toxic-waste cell

    EPA, Veolia at odds over toxic-waste cell

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 228738 The state’s pollution watchdog says it remains opposed to a new toxic-waste cell at a controversial hazardous-waste landfill…

More News

  • Minister’s warm welcome to Wellsprings

    Minister’s warm welcome to Wellsprings

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532816 Wellsprings for Women welcomed the Federal Minister for Multicultural Affairs, Dr Anne Aly, who saw first hand the South East-based centre’s efforts to…

  • Food for thought ahead of bigger Ramadan Night Market

    Food for thought ahead of bigger Ramadan Night Market

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 467847 Excitement grows ahead of the upcoming three-week Ramadan Night Market that promises to be bigger and better, but existing traders in Dandenong have…

  • Two men arrested after Wallace Road assault

    Two men arrested after Wallace Road assault

    Two men have been arrested following an assault in Cranbourne on the morning of Friday 6 February. Officers responded to reports of three men involved in a physical altercation on…

  • Opposition inquiry call rejected after peak-hour train disruption

    Opposition inquiry call rejected after peak-hour train disruption

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 183562 The State Opposition has called for a formal inquiry into Tuesday 3 February rail network disruption, where peak-hour disruption left thousands of Cranbourne…

  • Roadworks cause havoc for Casey commuters

    Roadworks cause havoc for Casey commuters

    Roadworks on a major Clyde North intersection has caused gridlock during peak hours for many Casey commuters, some saying that their usual 10 minute drive has taken them close to…

  • Looking Back

    Looking Back

    100 years ago 11 February 1926 The new “Keep to the Left Rule”, which the Dandenong Shire Council has not brought into force, is not very strictly observed in the…

  • What’s On

    What’s On

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 390730 Victorian Mosque Open Day Mosques open their doors to visitors on this annual open day organised by Islamic Council of Victoria. Venues include…

  • The power of self-acceptance

    The power of self-acceptance

    Intrinsic in feelings of hope is the acceptance of the self and then the acceptance of the situation with the faith that there is some benefit in it. This attitude…

  • Jail for armed carjacker targeting elderly driver

    Jail for armed carjacker targeting elderly driver

    A would-be carjacker who held a screwdriver to his elderly victim’s neck and threatened to kill him in a home driveway in Keysborough has been jailed. Petap Kong, 31, of…

  • Letter-to-the-editor: Who will grow the trees?

    Letter-to-the-editor: Who will grow the trees?

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 492338 This summer’s repeated 40-degree days have made one thing unavoidable: Melbourne’s suburbs are heating up, and trees are no longer decorative extras. Councils…