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One year ago today, the name Hannah Clarke was etched into Australia s consciousness.
The Brisbane woman s murder at the hands of her estranged husband represented another blow to our fragile national identity, to our collective delusion that things like that don t happen to people like her. Not in suburbs like Camp Hill, anyway.
As we mourned Hannah, as we raged and wrestled with the what-ifs, there were names many of us forgot: those of her three children.
Hannah and Trey. Image Image: Facebok.
Aaliyah, 6, Laianah, 4, and Trey, 3, were killed alongside Hannah when their father ambushed her car on the morning school run, set it alight, and then took his own life.
Bikie gang recruitment tricks revealed in exit program Outlaw motorcycle gangs are recruiting younger men who are drawn to the gangster image and keen to get rich quick, a new study has shown.
Crime by Darren Cartwright
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Subscriber only Outlaw motorcycle members now have a government-backed exit strategy to renounce their allegiance, including counselling and support to tackle any drug and alcohol issues. Queensland Police Minister Mark Ryan MP said the Exit Program was an Australian first and would assist former outlaw motorcycle gang (OMCG) members wanting a new and crime-free life. This is about helping gang members transform their lives and turn their backs on gangs. it s the first program of this type in the southern hemisphere, Mr Ryan said.
News by MICHAEL WRAY, GREG STOLZ 4th Feb 2021 5:08 AM
Premium Content  Bikie gangs are recruiting younger, more violent members straight from prison yards who are pushing out the old guard as greed and the gangster image replace traditional club values, according to new research. Two studies from the Australian Institute of Criminology based on unprecedented access to dozens of former bikies in Queensland have exposed sweeping changes inside Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs (OMCGs).    The research was based on transcripts of Queensland Police interviews with 39 bikies, providing startling insights as ex-bikies dished on the new breed of Nike Bikies and plastic gangsters .
Date Time
Changes in culture of OMCGs
The Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC) has today released two papers revealing the changing culture within outlaw motorcycle gangs (OMCG) and the effects on members, as described by former OMCG members themselves. These papers, prepared by the AIC’s Serious and Organised Crime Research Laboratory in partnership with Queensland Police Service, highlight the recruitment of increasingly violent and criminally inclined new members and the need to develop flexible support for those who want to leave clubs.
AIC Deputy Director Dr Rick Brown said the findings reveal never before seen insights into the changing nature of outlaw motorcycle gangs, their effects on members and the consequences associated with wanting to leave a club.