NSW's 'most wanted' man to face Sydney court

Alleged gang member Masood Zakaria was arrested when he landed in Darwin on Sunday afternoon. (HANDOUT/AUSTRALIAN FEDERAL POLICE)

An alleged kingpin of a major drug gang will face a Sydney court after fleeing the country and attempting to shelter in Turkey.

Alleged senior Alameddine gang member Masood Zakaria was deported from Turkey last week and arrested when he landed at Darwin Airport on Sunday evening.

Zakaria fled the country last year while under investigation for a string of serious organised crime-related offences.

He was arrested when he landed in Darwin on Sunday afternoon and appeared in Darwin Local Court on Monday.

Masood Zakaria headshot
Masood Zakaria was deported from Turkey where police allege he had lived for a year after fleeing.

NT Chief Judge Elizabeth Morris granted the extradition to NSW and he will face Downing Centre Local Court on Wednesday.

"Sounds like you'll be on a plane tomorrow and no doubt your lawyers will catch up with you in Sydney," Judge Morris said.

However, the granting of the extradition was a drawn-out affair, as NSW police forgot one crucial element of his arrest warrants.

“The warrant is not signed,” Judge Morris said.

“I need the warrant, that’s what an extradition is all about.”

NSW police officers rushed out of court and returned almost two hours later with the forms.

However, the new forms were signed electronically and had no valid signatures under the names.

Zakaria's lawyer Peter Lange submitted the warrants must be signed by hand rather than with a name.

Judge Morris eventually accepted the application after another 30 minutes of back and forth about the legality of arrest warrant signatures.

Outside court, NSW Police Detective Inspector Glen Baker could not confirm when on Tuesday Zakaria was due to fly out.

Glen Baker outside Darwin court
Detective Inspector Glen Baker said it was uncertain when Zakaria would be flown to NSW.

Earlier, NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Michael Fitzgerald described the 28-year-old as one of the state's "most wanted and significant" organised-crime figures.

Zakaria has been a focus of a transnational offshore task force Operation Gain targeting the nation's most prominent overseas-based offenders.

The Sydney man was wanted by police over his claimed links to the Alameddine gang and his alleged involvement in a failed plot to murder underworld figure Ibrahem Hamze.

Police thwarted an alleged attempt to kill Hamze in 2021 when they tried to stop a stolen Mercedes in North Sydney that investigators say was to be used for the crime.

Several men have already been charged with conspiring to murder Hamze.

NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Michael Fitzgerald
Assistant Commissioner Michael Fitzgerald described Zakaria as a "significant" crime figure in NSW.

Mr Fitzgerald said Zakaria fled Australia in a fishing boat as police were about to arrest him in 2022.

"We believe that he fled to Western Australia and got on a fishing boat and travelled overseas where he eventually landed in Turkey," he said.

Police believe Zakaria was second in charge of one of Sydney's largest crime gangs.

Turkish officials notified Australian authorities after Zakaria allegedly entered the country in 2022 on a false passport.

Further inquiries established he was living in the city of Bodrum, on the country’s southwest coast.

While overseas, police said Zakaria continued to associate with a number of organised crime figures with significant Australian links.

He was arrested and transferred to immigration detention by Turkish authorities in January and has been held in custody awaiting deportation.

Since arriving in Darwin on Sunday, Zakaria has been held on a NSW arrest warrant for offences including conspiracy to murder, knowingly directing the activities of a criminal group, supplying a large commercial quantity of cocaine and dealing in the proceeds of crime.

Several of the offences carry maximum jail terms of life in prison.

Australian Federal Police Assistant Commissioner Stephen Dametto said Australians who hid offshore in perceived safe havens to avoid facing court, would be caught.

“More than 70 per cent of the transnational serious organised criminals who target Australia are offshore," he said in a statement on Monday.

"One by one, these alleged criminals are being extradited or deported to Australia to face the justice system."

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