He’s a 20-year veteran of the Finks outlaw motorcycle club, standing well over six feet tall with a big, bushy beard and dressed head-to-toe in the uniform – ‘colours’ – of his group.
He insists he is just a ‘normal bloke’ and father who happens to like big-bore bikes and hanging out with like-minded mates.
‘I work full time, I have a mortgage and when I get home I have to mow the lawn just like anyone else,’ Big M told Daily Mail Australia in an interview club members almost never give.
‘I’m not making drugs in my back shed or acting as a stand-over man – in fact we try not to let guys like that into the club.’
The Finks Motorcycle Club is still about mateship and the brotherhood according to members who are upset with how the club lifestyle has changed in recent times
The members, who vary from veterans of 20 years with life-long connections to the club, to rookies with just four months in colours say the support from ‘the fellas’ is the reason they join and stay
He does not like his club being branded as an outlaw motorcycle gang – a term Australian police and legislators have adopted across the country to crack down on criminal activity by bikie gangs.
But the national crackdown on bikies is not without reason by lawmakers, with the gang members repeatedly charged with running drugs, guns and being involved in murder and assaults.
In 2009, NSW police formed taskforce Raptor with one objective: ‘target outlaw motorcycle gangs and any associated criminal enterprises.’
The Strike Force was formed after a vicious brawl erupted between rival gangs the Comancheros and Hells Angels at Sydney Airport on March 23 of that year in front of terrified passengers. Anthony Zervas, who was associated with the Hells Angels, was killed during the brutal attack.
‘To me a gang is a dangerous group of people, a street gang, people who fight over territory. That’s not us. We just like bikes.’
Daily Mail Australia was given rare access to members of the Finks in Sydney, who posed for photographs and spoke out about what they say are unfair perceptions.
But Big M still declined to be photographed or give his name name – because he didn’t want to draw any more ‘unwanted attention’ to himself or the club.
The Finks Motorcycle Club started in Sydney more than 50 years ago – named after a long-running comic called the Wizard of ID.
Big M recalls the glory days of the club 20 years ago, when club members could meet in public, ride together and wear their club insignia in pubs ‘without being kicked out’. He joined the club after his brother did.
‘We used to ride into the clubhouse on a Friday and ride back out on a Sunday,’ one member said – but clubhouses no longer exist – closed down after a crack-down on clubs
‘The term Outlaw Motorcycle Gang was given to us – we have and always will call ourselves a motorcycle club’.
‘But that has all changed – at the moment we are viewed as criminals, even if most of us have clear criminal records so we aren’t allowed to talk to each other.
‘The term Outlaw Motorcycle Gang was given to us – we have and always will call ourselves a motorcycle club.
The strict anti-consorting laws mean the clubhouse is a thing of the past – but they claim the gang’s ‘brotherhood’ has kept them together despite fears they could be charged with consorting and be jailed.
‘I know two guys who went to the pub with their families on the same night – and were given a warning,’ he said.
Members are not allowed to communicate with each other – unless they are seeking legal advice – the Finks lawyers are pictured centre with two members
Members are not allowed to communicate – most of them only feel comfortable being photographed with their faces covered
The men say all bikies have been ‘treated like criminals’ for years but say it is a few men who ruin it for everyone
‘The type of guys whose chests puff up as soon as they put on the vest – it is that kind of ”tough guy” s**t that p***es me off. And we try to stop that.
‘Some people try to join for the wrong reasons, we are a brotherhood, we come together because we love bikes, we ride together and we look after each other we are family. And we try to weed the guys who are there for other reasons out.’
He says popular culture has not helped the public perception of motorcycle clubs.
‘I watch Sons of Anarchy, but I tell you that show has a lot to answer for – it is nothing like that in a club.’
The club’s ‘gang’ status means most of the members are banned from talking to each other, or ‘consorting’.
Another member, known as Menace, said the strict laws won’t make him quit the club.
‘The type of guys whose chests puff up as soon as they put on the vest – it is that kind of ”tough guy s**t that p***es me off. And we try to stop that,’ a veteran bikie said
The men said there are a few rules before someone can join the club – ‘they have to be a good guy and if they are on a vespa we tell them to keep riding’
‘I am not going to let anyone tell me that I can’t talk to my friends,’ he said.
‘Just because some people do bad thing and happen to be members of clubs doesn’t mean we are all drug-dealing deviants – the club doesn’t condone any of that,’ he said.
‘It has changed the way clubs are, because some people get caught up in the wrong thing, but the perception we are all like that is ridiculous.
‘It is like saying all footballers are drug dealers after finding one doing it, or that they all abuse women if there is a scandal.’
The heavily-tattooed members of the club still ride together – but are only allowed to speak with each other if they are getting legal advice.
‘We find a way around it like that so we can still go on our rides, we went on a big run together a few weeks ago – and as long as we have our helmets on we can’t be talking,’ Big M said.
The consorting laws which keep them from their ‘traditional’ club events mean they can only speak with family members.
‘I wasn’t even allowed to talk to my brother-in-law before he died,’ Big M said. ‘I feel like by being told who I can and can’t be friends with has taken away my human rights, I have known a lot of these guys for more than 20 years.’
A young man who joined the club just four months ago revealed how it has ‘kept him on the straight and narrow’.
The heavily-tattooed members of the club still ride together – but are only allowed to speak with each other if they are getting legal advice
The consorting laws which keep them from their ‘traditional’ club events mean they can only speak with family members
‘The type of guys whose chests puff up as soon as they put on the vest – it is that kind of ”tough guy s**t that p***es me off. And we try to stop that’
‘Some people try to join for the wrong reasons, we are a brotherhood, we come together because we love bikes, we ride together and we look after each other we are family. And we try to weed the guys who are there for other reasons out’
‘The whole family was involved, kids would come to the clubhouse, the wives would come out it was a great atmosphere,’ a member said of the changing dynamics of club life
‘I am not going to let anyone tell me that I can’t talk to my friends,’ one of the members said
‘I was on the wrong path before and had no support or structure – but since I have been with these guys I have become a better person and I think I will stay out of jail,’ he said.
He still has a long way before he is a ‘fully fledged’ member of the club – but says he is keen to become part of the family.
Big M explained the ‘family’ and ‘brotherhood’ notions were pillars for the club – on top of the love for motorcycles.
‘Before we would ride into the clubhouse on a Friday afternoon and ride back out again on Sunday.
‘The whole family was involved, kids would come to the clubhouse, the wives would come out it was a great atmosphere.
Big M explained the ‘family’ and ‘brotherhood’ notions were pillars for the club – on top of the love for motorcycles (another member pictured)
‘But the spirit of the club is still the same – the family element is there we are always there for each other – my lounge room is more like a counsellors office some days with young blokes asking me questions about life,’ Big M said (another member pictured)
A member with his heavily tattooed face hidden under dark glasses and a Fink-branded scarf
‘But the spirit of the club is still the same – the family element is there we are always there for each other – my lounge room is more like a counsellors office some days with young blokes asking me questions about life.’
The veteran members of the club said ‘anyone can join’ as long as they ‘are good guys and are riding a proper motorcycle’.
If a potential member ‘rocked up on a scooter’ they would be told to ‘keep riding’ one of the men laughed.
‘We are an English-American club so basically Harleys, Triumphs are alright too,’ he said.
‘But it does take four years to get your full licence so we let the young fellas come on some of the smaller bikes.’
‘We are an English-American club so basically Harleys,’ a member said when asked what kind of bikes were accepted
‘I was on the wrong path before and had no support or structure – but since I have been with these guys I have become a better person and I think I will stay out of jail,’ one man said
The other thing that has changed the way bikies live is Firearm Protection Orders, which allow police to search their homes for guns at anytime without a warrant
The other thing that has changed the way bikies live is Firearm Protection Orders, which allow police to search their homes for guns at anytime without a warrant.
One man said this was one of the greater inconveniences of being with the club – but he would still never leave.
‘One day they came in to search the house and they sat there and went through my ten-year-old daughter’s jewellery box – that didn’t make sense to me because it isn’t big enough to hide a gun. She was pretty scared and calls them ninjas when they visit because of the heavy gear.
‘One day they came in to search the house and they sat there and went through my ten-year-old daughter’s jewellery box – that didn’t make sense to me because it isn’t big enough to hide a gun,’ a member (not the one pictured) said
There are more than 2000 members of the Finks club. according to the members
One member shows off his intricate tattoos, and says the club is a way of life for him that he won’t quit
Two members are pictured together here in their leather vests and Finks jumpers
‘They also take Nerf guns and water pistols as imitation weapons so we can’t have those in the house for the kids.’
If the men are not at home the police leave calling cards which say ‘came to say hi but you weren’t home, we will continue to visit you, your family and all known associates until we find you’.
There are more than 2000 members of the Finks club. according to the members. With that many members a ‘strong leadership’ is needed mostly to keep younger members in line.
‘We keep the younger lads in line, if they have a problem with someone or something we try to sort it out before anything happens.
If the men are not at home the police leave calling cards which say ‘came to say hi but you weren’t home, we will continue to visit you, your family and all known associates until we find you’, pictured
The impressive body art is a staple in the brotherhood – but the guys say it is ‘more of a fashion statement now’
A dedicated member shows off his Finks tattoo which features the club’s mascot which ironically holds a gun
The Finks have been operating in Australia for 50 years and say the club has no intentions of getting smaller or closing down
A consorting sheet shown to the bikies telling them who they are not allowed to be talking to
‘My kids walk the street too, so the last thing we want is anything to happen on the street.
‘The club doesn’t condone that – in fact we don’t condone any illegal behaviour – and for serious breaches we will even take away the boy’s patches.’
The Finks have been operating in Australia for 50 years and say the club has no intentions of getting smaller or closing down.
‘The brotherhood is only going to get stronger,’ one said.
‘I work full time, I have a mortgage and when I get home I have to mow the lawn just like anyone else,’ Big M said – another man pictured
The strict laws mean the clubhouse is a thing of the past – but the ‘brotherhood’ and the mate-ship still exists and keeps the club together ‘and stronger than ever’