logo
The gangster, the phone call, and the golden casket: Behind a funeral switcheroo that was all for show

The gangster, the phone call, and the golden casket: Behind a funeral switcheroo that was all for show

The inside story of how Sam 'The Punisher' Abdulrahim was laid to rest is a bizarre tale that shows just how obsessed the gangland is with appearances, even in death.
After nearly a year of desperately running to stay ahead of his legions of enemies, Abdulrahim was gunned down in a meticulously planned ambush at a Preston hotel parking garage on January 28, a brutal end for the man who had become the most hunted figure in Melbourne's underworld.
It was about an hour before the scheduled start of the funeral of 'Suna', as he was known to family and friends, when those closest to him – and most worried about his reputation – realised they had a problem.
The 32-year-old underworld figure-turned-boxer had been laid out in a basic wooden coffin for his memorial service inside the Alawi Islamic Association of Victoria Centre in Epping.
Normally, the style of coffin would not be that important – in the Islamic tradition, the dearly departed are ultimately buried wrapped only in a shroud.
But in life, appearances really mattered to Abdulrahim – he was all about flash cars, flash jewellery, flash women and big boasts, all part of his quest for a fearsome reputation inside in the ring and out on the streets.
It was becoming obvious to those who cared the most deeply for him that the plain box just would not do.
The problem? There was a press pack already swarming outside the hall, and mourners were beginning to arrive.
'It just didn't look right. It didn't look right enough for Suna,' an underworld source said. 'They were worried about what it would say [when it was seen] in the media.'
Abdulrahim had become infamous, in part for his flamboyant ways but mostly because of what had been done to him rather than what he had done in the underworld.
This was a man who had fought his way into a cruiserweight title, a former Mongol bikie who'd made enough enemies to warrant a $1 million contract on his head. And yet, he would still taunt them.
In just a few short years, he'd put off so many dangerous players in Melbourne's underworld that he was bashed, bricked, firebombed, and shot at in no fewer than 18 separate attacks before his death. That included surviving eight gunshot wounds at a funeral (outside the place he was to be buried that day) in 2022 and avoiding a hail of 17 bullets just months before his murder.
Loading
His list of enemies was a roll call of the top echelon of Melbourne's underworld – the Mongols and Comanchero bikie clubs, underworld killers Gavin 'Capable' Preston and Nabil Maghnie, and the suspected architect of his murder, tobacco kingpin Kazem Hamad.
Back at the funeral, a call was made to Simon 'Speedy' Khoury, a family friend and whose undertaker business had been burying loved ones in Melbourne's northern suburbs with a special touch for years.
Speedy, a long-time associate of convicted drug trafficker Tony Mokbel, also helped make the arrangements to lay to rest underworld players such as the Notorious Crime Family lieutenant Meshilin Marrogi, sister of George Marrogi, and Tony's brother Milad Mokbel. (Men wearing the funeral business' logo would turn up to support Tony and shake his hand at his bail hearing earlier this year.)
The problem was put to Speedy, and his solution would change the entire perception of Abdulrahim's funeral.
Soon after, a hearse pulled into the parking lot of the Islamic centre, holding a shiny golden coffin in the back.
Loading
The press pack was confused. This was the second hearse and the second coffin to arrive within an hour.
An honour guard of Abdulrahim's associates gathered at the hearse, lifting the (empty) gold coffin and taking it into the centre.
The media had no idea it was all for show.
Inside, Abdulrahim's 90-kilogram body was gently transferred from the wooden to the flash casket.
Only a handful of people knew that day that Abdulrahim arrived in a plain box but went out in a golden vessel.
The funeral home did not respond to a request for comment.
Not since gangland boss Carl Williams was buried in a $30,000 14-carat gold plated casket in 2010 has anyone in the underworld been so ostentatious in death.
There were scenes of high emotion as the coffin, draped in a green banner, was carried to the hearse and then driven to Northern Memorial Park where Abdulrahim's body was lifted out and placed reverently in the ground.
That was six months ago this week.
Abdulrahim's murder is yet to be solved. The four-man hit team, and the overseas gangland bosses thought to have ordered his murder, have never been arrested or charged.
The killing has been widely interpreted in the underworld as a message with a lethal lesson – Kaz Hamad and his crew will never forget and never forgive.
The Punisher's final resting place has become a gathering spot for his family and associates, with his grave adorned with fresh flowers, boxing memorabilia and cans of energy drink. The plot is emblazoned with the name 'Suna', and has a large photograph of him.
But unlike some of their other sworn enemies, Abdulrahim has at least been left to rest in peace where he was laid.
What happened to the golden casket that made such a fleeting appearance remains a mystery.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alleged hitman was handpicked as CFMEU health and safety man on Big Build
Alleged hitman was handpicked as CFMEU health and safety man on Big Build

Sydney Morning Herald

time20 minutes ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Alleged hitman was handpicked as CFMEU health and safety man on Big Build

A CFMEU delegate accused of involvement in a brazen underworld execution was parachuted into his lucrative union health and safety role four months after he allegedly gunned down a gangland figure in a suburban car park. Muhammed Sayan was working as a union health and safety representative until a fortnight ago, when armed police arrested him over his alleged role in the shooting of gangland boss Robert Issa in October 2023. Multiple sources, speaking anonymously due to the sensitive nature of the information, confirmed that Sayan was not elected by his fellow workers, as required by law, but parachuted into his CFMEU position after a request to the union. That February 2024 request came from a company part-owned by members of a Middle Eastern crime gang suspected by police to be linked to Issa's death only months earlier. Sayan was arrested a fortnight ago and accused of being part of a five-man hit squad that killed Issa in a Craigieburn shopping centre car park. The details of how Sayan got his union role to maintain site health and safety — and kept it after the union was plunged into administration — come amid separate revelations about how union bosses and ex-bikies culled from the CFMEU have re-emerged as industry fixers or subcontractors to the Allan government's Big Build projects. They include allegedly corrupt ex-CFMEU assistant secretary Derek Christopher, who has hung up his shingle as an industry 'mediator' through his newly founded firm, Atlas Consulting; ex-union delegate and former Mongols outlaw bikie boss Tyrone Bell, who is now also an industrial relations fixer via a company called Dynamis Health and Safety Relations; and Rebels bikie figure and sacked Big Build CFMEU health and safety representative Joel Leavitt, who is launching a labour-hire company. Gangland figure Mick Gatto is also still attempting to engage in deal-making with senior union officials.

Alleged hitman was handpicked as CFMEU health and safety man on Big Build
Alleged hitman was handpicked as CFMEU health and safety man on Big Build

The Age

time20 minutes ago

  • The Age

Alleged hitman was handpicked as CFMEU health and safety man on Big Build

A CFMEU delegate accused of involvement in a brazen underworld execution was parachuted into his lucrative union health and safety role four months after he allegedly gunned down a gangland figure in a suburban car park. Muhammed Sayan was working as a union health and safety representative until a fortnight ago, when armed police arrested him over his alleged role in the shooting of gangland boss Robert Issa in October 2023. Multiple sources, speaking anonymously due to the sensitive nature of the information, confirmed that Sayan was not elected by his fellow workers, as required by law, but parachuted into his CFMEU position after a request to the union. That February 2024 request came from a company part-owned by members of a Middle Eastern crime gang suspected by police to be linked to Issa's death only months earlier. Sayan was arrested a fortnight ago and accused of being part of a five-man hit squad that killed Issa in a Craigieburn shopping centre car park. The details of how Sayan got his union role to maintain site health and safety — and kept it after the union was plunged into administration — come amid separate revelations about how union bosses and ex-bikies culled from the CFMEU have re-emerged as industry fixers or subcontractors to the Allan government's Big Build projects. They include allegedly corrupt ex-CFMEU assistant secretary Derek Christopher, who has hung up his shingle as an industry 'mediator' through his newly founded firm, Atlas Consulting; ex-union delegate and former Mongols outlaw bikie boss Tyrone Bell, who is now also an industrial relations fixer via a company called Dynamis Health and Safety Relations; and Rebels bikie figure and sacked Big Build CFMEU health and safety representative Joel Leavitt, who is launching a labour-hire company. Gangland figure Mick Gatto is also still attempting to engage in deal-making with senior union officials.

Islamic court in Indonesia sentences two men to public caning after they were caught hugging and kissing
Islamic court in Indonesia sentences two men to public caning after they were caught hugging and kissing

7NEWS

time2 days ago

  • 7NEWS

Islamic court in Indonesia sentences two men to public caning after they were caught hugging and kissing

An Islamic court in Indonesia's conservative Aceh province on Monday sentenced two men to public caning, 80 times each, after Islamic religious police caught them engaged in what the court deemed were sexual acts: hugging and kissing. The trial at the Islamic Shariah District Court in Banda Aceh, the provincial capital, was held behind closed doors. Judges have the authority to limit public access in such a case and open it only for the verdict. The two men, aged 20 and 21, were arrested in April after residents saw them entering the same bathroom at Taman Sari city park and reported it to police patrolling the area. The police broke into the toilet and caught the men kissing and hugging, which the court considered to be a sexual act. The lead judge, Rokhmadi M Hum, said the two college students were 'legally and convincingly' proven to have violated Islamic law by committing acts that lead to gay sexual relations. The court didn't publicly identify the men. Prosecutors previously sought 85 strokes of the cane for each, but the three-judge panel decided on what they described as lenient punishment because the men were outstanding students who were polite in court, cooperated with authorities and had no previous convictions. The judges also ordered the time they have served to be deducted from their sentence. It means the number of lashes will be reduced by four as they have been detained for four months. The prosecutor, Alfian, who like many Indonesians uses only a single name, said he was not satisfied with the lighter sentence. But he said he will not appeal. Aceh is the only province in Muslim-majority Indonesia allowed to observe a version of Islamic law. It allows up to 100 lashes for morality offences including gay sex. Caning is also punishment for adultery, gambling, drinking and for women who wear tight clothes and men who skip Friday prayers. Indonesia's secular central government granted Aceh the right to implement the law in 2006 as part of a peace deal to end a separatist war. Aceh implemented an expansion in 2015 that extended the law to non-Muslims, who account for about 1 per cent of the province's population. Human rights groups have criticised the law, saying it violates international treaties signed by Indonesia protecting the rights of minorities. Indonesia's national criminal code doesn't regulate homosexuality. Monday's verdict was the fifth time that Aceh has sentenced people to public caning for homosexuality since the Islamic law was implemented. In February, the same court sentenced two men to public caning up to 85 times for gay sex after neighborhood vigilantes in Banda Aceh suspected them of being gay and broke into their rented room to catch them naked and hugging each other.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store