Retired bikie boss vows to emigrate after being raided while at dinner with friends

Retired bikie boss vows to leave Australia after being raided by police during dinner and threatened to five years in jail for being a ‘gangster’

  • Former Nomads MC national president Moudi Tajjour issued notice by police 
  • The 35-year-old said he was at dinner with friends when police raided the group 
  • In furious online response to the letter he says he is considering moving abroad 

Retired Nomads MC boss and self-confessed ‘bikie thug’ Moudi Tajjour has vowed to move interstate or possibly abroad following a police raid while he was at dinner with friends. 

The 35-year-old posted a letter on Friday night to Instagram that he received from police stating he had been identified as a member of the Nomads outlaw motorcycle gang. 

The letter also threatens Tajjour with five years imprisonment if he continues to associate with members of the group. 

The Sydney resident took to Instagram to unleash a furious reply to the letter claiming he has retired from the club. 

Retired Nomads MC boss and self-confessed ‘bikie thug’ Moudi Tajjour has vowed to move interstate or possibly abroad following a police raid while he was at dinner with friends 

Tajjour (pictured with estranged wife Sanaa Mehajer) said he carried a gun with him at all times when he visited Lebanon last year

Tajjour (pictured with estranged wife Sanaa Mehajer) said he carried a gun with him at all times when he visited Lebanon last year  

‘Firstly I’ve been retired for a while now. I am not allowed to see any of my mates or face a long prison sentence. Tell me how this is human to isolate someone?’ Tajjour wrote. 

‘I ain’t sure if I’m gonna continue living in Sydney much longer, might relocate to Melbourne or possibly abroad. I can’t live in isolation – it’s like I’m a prisoner in my own country.’ 

He then says he is unsure what the government’s issue is with him as he ‘minds his own business’ these days and focuses on his podcast and other ventures. 

‘Not sure why law enforcement have a vendetta against me,’ he wrote. 

The letter from police states that the Nomads have been identified as a criminal group for a number of reasons including ‘members of the gang have been convicted of serious violence and weapons offences’.  

The letter also threatens Tajjour with five years imprisonment if he continues to associate with members of the group

The letter also threatens Tajjour with five years imprisonment if he continues to associate with members of the group 

The Sydney resident took to Instagram to unleash a furious reply to the letter

The Sydney resident took to Instagram to unleash a furious reply to the letter 

Other reasons the letter gives are such as ‘members of the gang have been convicted of serious drug offences’ and the club’s ‘self identification and declaration as a one per cent motorcycle club’. 

Tajjour seized control of the Nomads presidency in November last year after a power struggle with former president Michael Clarke but has since claimed he has retired. 

He went through a high profile split with disgraced property developer Salim Mehajer’s sister Sanaa after she took an AVO out against him last year. 

In 2006 he was jailed over the manslaughter of Robin Nassour, the younger brother of Fat Pizza star George.  

He claims he has retired from the club to focus on other businesses

He claims he has retired from the club to focus on other businesses 

He was a member of the club for just under two decades, having been the youngest ever person to join. 

After dropping out of school in the late 1990s in grade eight, Tajjour then joined the Nomads ranks as 15-year-old under the wing of his older brother Sleiman. 

‘I was 15 years old – the youngest bikie to ever join a club – but I was a nominee for 16 months because I kept punching on with members, so my cousin Sam Ibrahim kept taking my colours,’ Tajjour told Daily Mail Australia last year.

A rare photo of Tajjour's early days as a Nomads member shows him standing alongside older brother Sleiman (left) and cousin Michael Ibrahim, younger brother of Kings Cross nightclub owner John

A rare photo of Tajjour’s early days as a Nomads member shows him standing alongside older brother Sleiman (left) and cousin Michael Ibrahim, younger brother of Kings Cross nightclub owner John

‘You’d get put in a circle and have a crack with the boys for a few minutes, and if you didn’t drop your guard and fought until you got knocked out, you’d get your colours.

‘You’d come into the clubhouse and they’d say: ‘It’s on now, are you sure you want to do this? How much do you want your colours?’… and you’d punch on with hard men, but you’d earn your colours the right way.’ 

He claims he has currently left the bikie lifestyle behind and is focusing on other businesses including a podcast. 

Tajjour seized control of the Nomads presidency in November last year after a power struggle with former president Michael Clarke but has since claimed he has retired

 Tajjour seized control of the Nomads presidency in November last year after a power struggle with former president Michael Clarke but has since claimed he has retired 

 

 

 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk