Teens arrested over shooting of former NRL star, alleged attacks on son

0
3
Advertisement
Riley Walter

Four teenagers, including a 16-year-old boy, have been arrested over a spate of violent incidents allegedly targeting former NRL star Matt Utai’s son, who police say is at the centre of an escalating gangland conflict between an emerging Sydney gang and the notorious Alameddine crime family.

Detectives from the newly formed Strike Force Halesowen on Thursday raided six properties in Riverwood, Guildford, Lilyfield, Villawood and Auburn, arresting two 19-year-old men, an 18-year-old man and a 16-year-old boy over the shooting of Utai and the firebombing and shooting of homes linked to his 24-year-old son, Iziah.

Former NRL star Matt Utai was shot in the chest and leg in a brazen drive-by shooting in Sydney’s south-west on Tuesday morning.Kate Geraghty, Andy Zakeli
Iziah Utai’s alleged links to organised crime are being probed after his father, former NRL star Matt Utai, was shot in Greenacre on Tuesday.Facebook

Matt Utai, a member of the Canterbury Bulldogs’ premiership-winning side in 2004, was shot outside his Greenacre home in a “brazen ambush” on Tuesday morning. The 44-year-old

Advertisement

Detectives on Thursday charged a 16-year-old boy with being an accessory after the fact to the attempted murder of Utai, who was shot in the chest and leg as he walked to his car parked outside the home he shares with his wife and children at about 6am. The boy was also charged with supplying a pistol to a person not authorised to possess it and participating in a criminal group.

Police will allege the boy helped Utai’s shooter conceal the pistol used in the Tuesday morning attack. He was refused bail to appear in a children’s court on Friday.

Detectives also charged a 19-year-old man who they allege drove the gunman, who is yet to be arrested, from Utai’s house after the shooting. He was also charged with being an accessory after the fact to Utai’s attempted murder and participating in a criminal group. He was refused police bail to appear in Parramatta Local Court on Friday.

Iziah Utai’s Guildford West home is set alight.SCN Worldstar

Detectives believe Utai was targeted because of his son’s alleged involvement with the self-proclaimed Coconut Cartel, a “violent criminal organisation” that has been engaged in an increasingly violent feud over control of Sydney’s lucrative drug market.

Advertisement

Less than 24 hours later, Iziah Utai’s Guildford West home was set alight, while a St Clair property linked to him was sprayed with bullets.

A video circulated throughout Sydney’s underworld and published by SCN Worldstar shows a person setting the front of the Guildford West property alight.

“F— him and the Coconut Cartel … this is the start of the destruction,” a person says in the video.

In December, several shots were fired at the same home. Two women and a child were inside at the time, but were uninjured. Last May, Iziah’s Merrylands barbershop was firebombed twice in two days.

Strike Force Halesowen detectives on Thursday arrested two men, aged 18 and 19, over the fire, charging both with damaging property and participating in a criminal group. The 18-year-old was granted conditional police bail to appear in Bankstown Local Court on March 10.

Advertisement

The 19-year-old was also charged with drug supply offences related to a kilogram of cocaine allegedly found at his Villawood home. He was refused police bail to appear in Bankstown Local Court on Friday.

No arrests have been made over the St Clair shooting. Video published by SCN Worldstar shows several shots being fired at the front of the Menzies Circuit home from a high-powered rifle.

A gunman opens fire on a St Clair home linked to Iziah Utai.SCN Worldstar

Iziah Utai left Australia shortly after senior underworld figure Dawood Zakaria was killed in a botched assassination attempt on one of his associates last May and is believed to be residing overseas. A warrant for Iziah Utai’s arrest in relation to Zakaria’s murder has been issued.

Police allegedly seized three vehicles, knuckle dusters, electronic devices and items of clothing during Thursday’s raids.

Advertisement

The Coconut Cartel has emerged as the main rival of the Alameddine crime family, which police have long alleged has controlled Sydney’s illicit drug market. The Coconut Cartel is believed to be comprised of young men who have defected from the Alameddine network, including many of Pacific Islander descent, as it has fractured over several years.

Utai’s shooting and the targeting of homes linked to his son marked the most significant escalation of the conflict and sparked the establishment of Strike Force Halesowen, a 100-strong police taskforce to quell the violent feud.

The conflict between the two groups has been escalating since the splintering of the Alameddine network after several senior members defected from the group to form their own rival crime syndicate.

The defections sparked a gangland war and a series of retaliatory shootings in which several people were injured or killed. Police have not publicly linked that conflict to the current feud between the Alameddine network and the Coconut Cartel.

Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au