The lavish lifestyle of an alleged arson ring leader has been laid bare in court as he fights to be released from custody.

Majid Alibadi, 25, on Thursday applied for bail in Melbourne Magistrates Court after he was arrested in March on fresh charges.

In total, he is facing more than 20 charges relating to alleged firebombings and car thefts across Melbourne between September 2023 and March.

Majid Alibadi, 25, is allegedly responsible for overseeing the firebombing of multiple businesses and residential properties as part of the ongoing conflict between Middle Eastern crime groups. (Supplied)

The Hamad crime family was behind the series of arson attacks against the Haddara syndicate, Detective Leading Senior Constable Matthew Lindsay told the court.

The conflict between the Middle Eastern crime gangs was over the importation and distribution of illegal tobacco, the detective said.

Lindsay claimed Alibadi was an “agent” for Kazem ‘Kaz’ Hamad, who was allegedly running the organised crime operations from the Middle East.

Police began bugging Alibadi’s car after the grave of Meshilin Marrogi – from the Marrogi crime family – was desecrated in July 2023, the detective said.

He told the court there were several conversations where Alibadi allegedly organised the arsons and counselled others to carry out the attacks.

They include the firebombing of a Glenroy tobacco store in October and two arson attacks on the Karizma restaurant in Docklands in November.

Majid Alibadi, 25, is allegedly responsible for overseeing the firebombing of multiple businesses and residential properties as part of the ongoing conflict between Middle Eastern crime groups. (Supplied)

Both businesses are owned by members of the Haddara family.

In more than two hours of evidence, Lindsay detailed Alibadi’s lavish lifestyle including a $30,000 shopping spree at Fendi, first-class flights and regular Nobu visits.

Alibadi’s brother also last week received $270,670 in cash to fund the 25-year-old’s legal expenses, Sen Det Lindsay said.

The detective maintained if Alibadi was released on bail, there would be a very real threat to community safety.

One of the Haddaras also reported receiving threats on his and his family’s lives, Sen Det Lindsay said.

But Alibadi’s barrister Dermot Dann told the court there were fears for his client’s safety in custody, which meant he was spending 23 hours a day in prison lockdown.

See also  Sydney grandmother Viviana Leonor Varas web of lies revealed as she's jailed after swindling $400,000 from her friends

Dann said there was a place at a residential rehabilitation facility available to Alibadi, where he could receive treatment for his drug addiction and be supervised.

The bail application before Magistrate Megan Casey continues.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sign Up for Our Newsletters

Get notified of the best deals on our WordPress themes.

You May Also Like

'Nothing short of a massacre': 5 fatally shot in Oklahoma City murder-suicide

OKLAHOMA CITY (TCD) — A 10-year-old child reportedly found five of his…

Woman fined for smoke alarm failure after six killed in Queensland house fire

Cleveland magistrate Deborah Vasta handed down the maximum fine of $667.25 for…

Thieves steal more than $12,000 in makeup from Seattle stores

By Ishita Srivastava For Dailymail.Com Published: 13:21 EST, 16 February 2024 |…

Yoni Barrios Arrested: Los Angeles DA failed to convict the man who killed two and injured six in a Las Vegas stabbing

Yoni Barrios Arrested – The man accused of stabbing eight and killing…