logo
Sayit Akca admits involvement in Dural caravan of explosives but denies orchestrating antisemitic attacks

Sayit Akca admits involvement in Dural caravan of explosives but denies orchestrating antisemitic attacks

Sayit Akca, the man accused of orchestrating a series of antisemitic attacks in Sydney, has spoken exclusively to Four Corners, admitting he was involved in sourcing a caravan full of explosives.
Speaking from his hideout in Türkiye, Akca denied he was the mastermind behind a spree of antisemitic attacks and insisted he was helping authorities get explosives off the street.
The discovery of the caravan in a Sydney suburb came after months of firebombing and antisemitic graffiti that shocked the city and left its Jewish community reeling.
Police levelled the blame at organised crime, alleging one self-motivated mastermind was pulling the strings and exploiting fear for their own self-interest.
Akca, well-known in Sydney's criminal underworld, insisted that it was not him.
A Sydney synagogue targeted in one of the antisemitic attacks.
(
ABC News
)
A deal to get home
Akca had been on the run for more than a year when, he says, he asked a lawyer: "What would it take to get back?"
A one-time gym owner and entrepreneur, Akca fled Australia in 2023 after being charged with conspiring to import a commercial quantity of illicit drugs. The arrest was part of Operation Ironside, a global organised crime bust led by the Australian Federal Police (AFP).
Akca said he didn't just run because of the charges: he feared underworld enemies were after him.
"I was getting heat and aggression from every angle. I was hearing there was numbers on my head," he said.
After a year bouncing around South-East Asia, he wanted to go home.
"I really miss my son … When he's old enough to ponder and look for me, it's one thing to think I abandoned him. It's another to see that I really tried [to see him]."
Akca said he was helping authorities get explosives off the street.
(
Four Corners: Mayeta Clark
)
Akca said he approached authorities with a "trade-in" — an arrangement where weapons or explosives are handed over in exchange for leniency in court. The reason police would consider trades like this is to get weapons off the street.
In late 2024, Akca said he reached out to the AFP to negotiate a trade so that he could come back to Australia and have his bail reissued.
"I was giving them explosives," Akca said.
"I said, 'Look, I've got information on a movement of explosives. I can seize it and I can hand it over.'"
Akca claimed an AFP officer assured him the deal would get him home.
Four Corners can't verify a lot of what Akca said. The AFP and NSW Police have declined requests for interviews.
An AFP spokeswoman said its investigation remained ongoing and questioned "the motivation of the individual interviewed by Four Corners".
The caravan
Akca said he intercepted the caravan of explosives through the driver who was moving it between a black-market seller and buyer.
He insisted he didn't buy the explosives himself, but, when asked for proof, said he didn't have the phone he was using at the time.
Akca said he told the driver where to leave the caravan.
"I actually picked Dural and I just told the driver … to just put it in a safe spot."
He said he instructed the driver to remove the detonators.
"
My clear instruction was, 'make sure this is not gonna explode.'
"
The street in Dural where the caravan was left.
(
Four Corners: Briana Fiore
)
Akca said he had nothing to do with the note listing Jewish sites that was later found in the van.
"If I knew that was there, I would've taken it out," he said. "I'm not in Australia. I don't know who put that in."
Akca said he told the AFP the location of the caravan around December 10. It wasn't until six weeks later that NSW Police discovered the caravan when a man living nearby reported it.
The AFP would not confirm with Four Corners whether Akca notified them of the caravan's location on December 10, or when the AFP notified NSW Police about its possible location.
State and federal politicians worry the relationship between the two policing agencies has hampered the investigation.
"There are huge failings in the way our law enforcements are sharing information," state Nationals MP Wes Fang said.
"The adversarial nature between the two agencies is how terrorist attacks slip through."
An AFP spokeswoman said NSW Police and the AFP worked closely and effectively to keep Australians safe.
In a statement, NSW Police said it worked collaboratively with its partner agencies.
In January, before news about the caravan had broken, Akca sent Four Corners a text:
"There will be news shortly on a van that got found full of explosives that was targeted at the Israelis," he wrote.
He also said the caravan was terror-related.
The ABC contacted NSW Police. An hour later, the Daily Telegraph published the story.
It's difficult to pin Akca down on how he knew the van was "targeted at the Israelis" prior to the news breaking.
Akca says he told the driver to put the caravan "in a safe spot".
(
Four Corners: Briana Fiore
)
In the weeks that followed the caravan's discovery, Akca said he offered more trades — fishing the underworld for more explosives, even handing over another stash to police. The AFP would not confirm this.
"When we handed those over, that didn't make the news," Akca said. "They reacted really fast that time."
But by March, his hopes of a deal had turned sour.
Watch Akca's stunning admissions in Four Corners' exclusive interview, tonight from 8:30 on ABC TV and
.
'Pulling the strings'
Seven weeks after the discovery of the van, the AFP announced there was never going to be a "mass-casualty event".
AFP Deputy Commissioner Krissy Barrett said the caravan was "concocted by criminals" for their own benefit.
Someone, she said, was "pulling the strings" of this plan from a distance, using hired local criminals to carry it out.
"Put simply, the plan was the following: organise for someone to buy a caravan, place it with explosives and written material of antisemitic nature. Leave it in a specific location and … inform law enforcement about an impending terror attack against Jewish Australians," she said.
Within days, Sayit Akca's name was all over the media as a key person of interest.
Then, as authorities were grilled in parliamentary hearings, the scale of what Akca was being accused of became clearer.
The discovery of the caravan was preceded by months of attacks that had shocked Sydney's Jewish community. Synagogues were spray-painted with swastikas, homes were graffitied, businesses were set alight.
A car set alight and a home graffitied in the Sydney suburb of Woollahra.
(
ABC News
)
"I believe there are 14 incidents separate to the caravan … we believe all of those have the same common source," NSW Police Deputy Commissioner David Hudson told state parliament.
At Senate estimates, AFP Deputy Commissioner Barrett alleged a "suspected criminal" overseas was behind it.
"We allege this person paid local criminals to carry out antisemitic graffiti and vandalism for weeks whilst planning the caravan plot," she said.
"We know that this was to create absolute fear and anxiety in the Jewish community to get the attention from law enforcement. In exchange for providing information of an imminent threat, they wanted to return to Australia without being sent straight to jail."
Akca denies orchestrating the attacks or the caravan "fake terror plot", and maintains he tried to help law enforcement by intercepting the explosives.
"I removed something off the street and gave it to them. And then there's a bunch of other things they're alleging was me. But I deny it. Doesn't match my timeline," he said.
"It feels like the narrative is just being controlled really inaccurately."
'No relief'
Akca believes he's safe from extradition in Türkiye and no longer wants to come back.
"I was willing to do that, but not anymore."
If he were to return, he faces the possibility of a sentence of life imprisonment for his drug charges alone.
He knows many won't believe his story.
"Everyone's entitled to their opinion. If they put out the right page, I'm putting out the left page. People can pick something in the middle," he said.
Akca knows many won't believe him.
(
Four Corners: Mayeta Clark
)
The effects of the terrifying shadow organised crime cast over Australia with these attacks are still being felt.
Hate crime laws were rushed through NSW and federal parliaments. Both contained controversial provisions.
"What could have been, I think, a really unifying moment of political leadership where we pass laws to criminalise the worst of hate speech, [became] this absolute political bun fight over taking it to this extreme level of mandatory sentencing," Greens senator David Shoebridge said of the federal laws.
"Mandatory sentencing is an attack on the independence of the judiciary," he said.
New South Wales's legislation was debated in a single day.
Several New South Wales parliamentarians expressed grave concerns about the passing of what they said were ambiguous laws affecting protests and free speech.
Rabbi Ben Elton is chief minister of The Great Synagogue in Sydney.
(
Four Corners: Briana Fiore
)
The Jewish community is still shaken by the attacks.
Rabbi Ben Elton, whose synagogue was included on the list of sites found in the caravan, said it didn't matter what the motivation behind the attacks was.
"There was no relief when the police said this might be by organised crime because synagogues were still targeted. Day cares were still targeted, lives were still endangered. It makes no difference."
"All that matters is, are Jews being targeted? Are Jews being terrorised deliberately? And that was the case."
Watch Four Corners' full investigation, The Fugitive, tonight from 8:30 on ABC TV and
.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sydney preacher taken to court over alleged anti-Semitic speech
Sydney preacher taken to court over alleged anti-Semitic speech

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

Sydney preacher taken to court over alleged anti-Semitic speech

A Muslim preacher is being sued by Australia's peak Jewish body over alleged anti-Semitic speeches in which he allegedly described Jewish people as 'vile' and 'treacherous'. Wissam Haddad, also known as Abu Ousayd, is being taken to the Federal Court by the Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) over a series of lectures he gave in November 2023. A three-day hearing in Sydney's Federal Court is set to begin on Tuesday. Recordings of the speeches made at the Bankstown centre, which allegedly included derogatory generalisations about Jewish people, such as descriptions of them as 'vile' and 'treacherous' people, were uploaded online. The proceedings have been brought by ECAJ co-chief executive Peter Wertheim AM and deputy president Robert Goot AO SC, who claim Mr Haddad breached the Racial Discrimination Act 1975. Mr Wertheim said they previously attempted 'in good faith' to resolve the matter through the Australian Human Rights Commission, but a conciliated resolution could not be achieved. 'Accordingly, we have commenced proceedings in the Federal Court,' he said. 'Australia has long enjoyed a reputation as a multicultural success story where people of many different faiths and ethnic backgrounds have for the most part lived in harmony and mutual respect.' Mr Wertheim added that all Australians were 'free to observe our faith and traditions within the bounds of Australian law'. 'Maintaining and strengthening social cohesion is the role of governments and government agencies, but lately they have failed us,' he said. 'It should not fall on our community, or any other community, to take private legal action. However, in the circumstances we feel we have no alternative.'

Preacher trial over alleged hate speech
Preacher trial over alleged hate speech

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Preacher trial over alleged hate speech

A Muslim preacher is being sued by Australia's peak Jewish body over alleged anti-Semitic speeches in which he allegedly described Jewish people as 'vile' and 'treacherous'. Wissam Haddad, also known as Abu Ousayd, is being taken to the Federal Court by the Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) over a series of lectures he gave in November 2023. A three-day hearing in Sydney's Federal Court is set to begin on Tuesday. Wissam Haddad is being sued over a series of alleged anti-Semitic speeches delivered at a Bankstown religious centre. NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia Recordings of the speeches made at the Bankstown centre, which allegedly included derogatory generalisations about Jewish people, such as descriptions of them as 'vile' and 'treacherous' people, were uploaded online. The proceedings have been brought by ECAJ co-chief executive Peter Wertheim AM and deputy president Robert Goot AO SC, who claim Mr Haddad breached the Racial Discrimination Act 1975. Mr Wertheim said they previously attempted 'in good faith' to resolve the matter through the Australian Human Rights Commission, but a conciliated resolution could not be achieved. 'Accordingly, we have commenced proceedings in the Federal Court,' he said. He is being taken to the Federal Court by the Executive Council of Australian Jewry. Supplied Credit: Supplied 'Australia has long enjoyed a reputation as a multicultural success story where people of many different faiths and ethnic backgrounds have for the most part lived in harmony and mutual respect.' Mr Wertheim added that all Australians were 'free to observe our faith and traditions within the bounds of Australian law'. 'Maintaining and strengthening social cohesion is the role of governments and government agencies, but lately they have failed us,' he said. 'It should not fall on our community, or any other community, to take private legal action. However, in the circumstances we feel we have no alternative.'

Armoured trucks allegedly used to smuggle cash around Australia as federal police charge group with money laundering offences
Armoured trucks allegedly used to smuggle cash around Australia as federal police charge group with money laundering offences

7NEWS

time9 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Armoured trucks allegedly used to smuggle cash around Australia as federal police charge group with money laundering offences

A security company allegedly used an armoured transport service to smuggle cash around the nation as it laundered millions of dollars of criminal proceeds. Three men — aged 32, 48 and 58 — and a 35-year-old woman have been charged with multiple money laundering offences, Australian Federal Police say. Investigations continue into the scheme that allegedly transferred $190 million into cryptocurrency between October 2022 and May 2024. Authorities have restrained 17 properties, bank accounts and luxury cars in NSW and Queensland worth more than $21 million, allegedly purchased with tainted money. 'This investigation has unravelled a sophisticated operation that allegedly moved illicit cash around the country,' AFP Detective Superintendent Adrian Telfer told reporters on Monday. 'It was truly a national operation, laundering the profits of criminal ventures across the country, (and) these cash profits were being flown into Queensland to be washed and returned to individuals.' Investigators allege the Gold Coast-based security company used a complex network of bank accounts, businesses, couriers and cryptocurrency accounts to launder millions of dollars of illicit funds over 18 months. 'The results we are announcing today will deliver a significant blow to alleged individuals, whoever relied on this operation to turn their ill-got profits into property portfolios, luxury cars and cryptocurrency,' Mr Telfer said. The 48-year-old man and the woman, who were the director and general manager respectively of the security business, were each charged with a money laundering offence. The couple was granted bail to face Southport Magistrates Court on July 21. The 58-year-old man is accused of funnelling laundered money through a business account to a separate business account controlled by the 32-year-old man. He was also charged with two money laundering offences and was granted bail to face Brisbane Magistrates Court on August 1. The 32-year-old man is accused of laundering $9.5 million through the operation over 15 months. He has been charged with money laundering and failing to provide the password to a mobile phone. He has been remanded in custody and is scheduled to face Brisbane Magistrates Court on Monday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store