Hakan Ayik, 42, remains one of Australia s most wanted men after fleeing Sydney for Turkey more than a decade ago when he was linked to a $230 million heroin importation syndicate.
Hakan Ayik - dubbed the Facebook Gangster - was unwittingly a key part to a recent police operation that resulted in the arrests of hundreds of criminals
Leading criminologists believe flamboyant Facebook Gangster and alleged drug lord Hakan Ayik will never give himself up after being caught in Operation Ironside.
Aussies looking to find love online may just find themselves swiping across an eshay as more youths embrace being part of the subculture.
Eshays are signing up to Tinder looking for dates as the subculture that includes its own mashed-up language and designer sportswear grows across the nation.
The dating site is now awash with pictures of single males seeking a partner showing them with staple eshay items accompanying their profiles.
They appear featuring favoured eshay looks such as bumbags slung over the one shoulder and sporting a pair of Nike TNs.
Eshays, which have long been around in pockets of Sydney, are now reportedly branching out into other areas across the nation, leaving middle-class parents worried their children want to emulate a dangerous subculture.
03:01 EDT, 10 February 2021
111 shares
Desperate parents have issued a plea for help after a string of terrifying incidents involving violent eshays on Sydney s affluent northern beaches.
One mother took to Facebook after her son, 21, was confronted by two teenagers as he ate his dinner with his friends at Mona Vale Beach about 7pm on Tuesday.
The mum said the teenagers demanded he and his friend hand over their food and pulled out a knife when asked to walk away.
Eshays prowl in packs, speaking their own mashed-up language as they strut around town. A Northern Beaches mother has told of her son s scary encounter with a group of young ferals