Hungarian Mafia

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Group.png Hungarian Mafia
(Crime syndicate, Australia/VIPaedophile)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
HeadquartersAustralia
A powerful organized crime network of Jewish-Hungarian "businessmen" in Australia

The Hungarian mafia was a powerful, right-wing emigre group in Australia consisting of immigrant Jewish-Hungarian businessmen leading organized crime.

Official narrative

Persistent conspiracy theory without a shred of evidence.[1]

Members

The group included Peter Abeles, Alexander Barton, Sir Paul Strasser and Sir Ivan Charody), Sir Arthur George It was members of this group who had funded Bernie Houghton when he first came to Australia, and who provided employment for Michael Hand.[2]. Abe Saffron was king of the Sydney underworld.

Sexual blackmail

John Dowd, leader of the NSW opposition in 1981, told to journalist Tony Reeves how:

A green journalist might think there was some deep, dark, hidden corruption Dowd knew would surface to ensure he never got the top job. I was far more cynical, and I put it to him that he couldn't become premier because they had nothing on him. He agreed. 'They've tried to set me up with small boys, big boys, small girls, big girls, even old hags', he said. 'None of it worked.' It was classic Saffron 'sexual profiling' for blackmail. I suggested to him that powerful forces were at work against him. Who exactly were these people, this 'extra-parliamentary group' holding the 'keys to the safe'? I can now reveal the answer he then gave me. 'You know who I'm referring to,' he said. 'Yes, I'm sure I do', I replied, 'but I just want to be certain we're both talking about the same people'. So he told me: 'Sir Peter Abeles, Sir Arthur George, Sir Paul Strasser, John Charody, Abe Saffron and a few others.' We were talking about the same old gang, the gang I had dubbed 'The Brotherhood'.[3]


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References

  1. https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/data/UQ_193898/HV7173_H35_1986.pdf Richard Hall Disorganized Crime
  2. John Jiggens, Marijuana Australiana: Cannabis Use, Popular Culture and the Americanisation of Drugs Policy in Australia 1938 - 1988 (QUT PhD, 2004), pp.186.
  3. Tony Reeves, "Mr Sin", Allen and Unwin, Sydney, 2007, page 134


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