Showy bikie boss drips with expensive Versace accessories as he faces court over charges relating to his gangland empire
- Alan Meehan cut a striking figure as he arrived at court
- The bathrobe bikie was clad heads to toe in Versace
Bikie boss Alan Meehan swaggered into court clad head to toe in designer Versace gear as he faced charges linked to his alleged gangland empire on Thursday.
Wearing a tailored grey suit and clutching a $1036 Versace manbag, Meehan cut a striking figure as he entered Sydney’s Downing Centre Local Court.
Featuring the Comanchero colours of yellow gold and black, Meehan’s $380 Versace tie matched his $1209 Versace loafers and $1245 Dita Meta-Evo One sunglasses.
An expensive gold watch and yellow handkerchief completed the look as the bikie gang’s national president stepped back into the public eye, telling media he was ‘feeling good’.
Bikie boss Alan Meehan swaggered into court clad head to toe in designer Versace gear as he faced charges linked to his alleged gangland empire on Thursday
Alan Meehan was famously photographed wearing a grubby dressing gown (pictured) when police arrived early one morning to serve court orders on him at his Southern Highlands home
Alan Meehan later posed on social media in an $867 Versace bathrobe alongside his wife wearing $54 Peter Alexander Winnie the Pooh pyjamas in matching gang colours
He was flanked by a mullet-clad associate wearing a chunky gold medal engraved with ‘Original 22H Bankstown Boy’, believed to relate to the suburb’s 2200 postcode.
Meehan fled his NSW country retreat for Queensland’s Gold Coast after the Supreme Court slapped a serious crime prevention order on him last November.
He was famously photographed wearing a grubby dressing gown when police arrived at his home, before later posing on social media in a Versace bathrobe.
The Comanchero supremo was arrested on the Gold Coast in January and charged with four breaches of the order which prevented him from contacting 34 named individuals.
He also had to alert police if he planned to live anywhere other than his main home in Yerrinbool in the NSW Southern Highlands, and was banned from using encrypted apps including social media.
Police allegedly found the Facebook and Instagram apps on his phone at the time of his arrest, and he had not informed police of his move to Queensland.
He was deported back to NSW in February and remanded in custody until he was finally granted bail in April.
It’s understood he was replaced as national president by Melbourne bikie Bemir Saravic while in custody but has since resumed his position after he was freed.
Alan Meehan was deported back to NSW in February (pictured) and remanded in custody until he was finally granted bail in April
Alan Meehan arrived at Sydney’s Downing Centre Court on Thursday flanked by a mullet-clad associate (pictured)
The associate was wearing a chunky gold medal engraved with ‘Original 22H Bankstown Boy’ (pictured), believed to relate to the suburb’s 2200 postcode
Meehan made a desperate plea to change the terms of his bail conditions earlier in the week in the wake of a reported $3million bounty on his head.
On Monday, with police consent, the court allowed the ‘urgent’ request to change his living arrangements and curfew conditions, with some details kept secret.
The courtroom hearing came just days after coke kingpin Alen Moradian was executed in a gangland hit in Bondi Junction on June 27.
Moradian was understood to be one of the founders of The Commission drug cartel which is said to run Sydney’s coke industry with the Comanchero.
On Thursday Meehan admitted one charge of breaching the court order and three other charges were withdrawn.
His barrister Avni Djemal told the court the breach did not warrant a prison sentence.
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