
Salim Mehajer walks free from jail: Disgraced property developer swaggers out through the razor wire in blue suit to go and live with his mum and dad because he's broke
The one-time millionaire who flaunted his wealth with an extravagant wedding and luxury marble mansion swaggered out from behind the razor wire of a western Sydney prison on Friday.
Wearing a blue suit, and his white teeth bared in a dazzling smile XX, the 39-year-old fraudster strolled out of the John Morony Correctional Centre at Windsor without a care in the world - but a very long list of parole conditions.
The new parolee looked upbeat as he jumped in a waiting blacked out limo and sped through the prison gates, but faces a strict regime of reporting daily to his parole officer.
The eldest of Amal and Mohamad Mehajer's eight children, he will be relying on his parents' support if he follows through on his plan to rebuild his failed property empire.
The former Auburn council deputy mayor has been in prison since November 2020, when he was hailed for lying to a court, and has served back-to-back sentences for multiple offences.
The NSW State Parole Authority (SPA) decided last month to grant his release m parole on conditions including that he undergo drug and alcohol testing, participate in domestic violence programs if directed and not communicate with any Outlaw Motorcycle Gang bikies or associates.
He is also banned from contacting his DV victim or entering the Central Coast.
Mehajer was declared bankrupt during a previous prison stint in 2018 when his property business, SM Project Developments, was liquidated.
Creditors included the Australian Taxation Office and the company which built the marble staircase at his former lavish home in Frances Street, Lidcombe.
He was locked up again in 2020 after he was found guilty of two counts of perverting the course of justice and one count of making a false statement under oath.
While behind bars in 2023, Mehajer was again convicted in separate trials for unrelated fraud and domestic violence offences.
A jury found Mehajer guilty of multiple counts of assault, one count of intimidation and one count of suffocation relating to his abuse of an ex-partner, and he was sentenced to a maximum of seven years and nine months in jail.
He was convicted of assaulting the victim by punching her in the head in his car, suffocating her with his hand over her nose and mouth until she passed out, crushing her hand as she held her phone and threatening to kill her mother.
At a further trial while he was in jail, he was found guilty by a jury of fraud on two counts each of making a false document and using a false document.
The jury convicted him of creating false statutory declarations and affidavits by forging the signatures of his solicitor, Zali Burrows, and one of his six sisters.
Mehajer overcame a raft of objections, including the risk of him reoffending, his refusal to change his attitude and his continued denial of some of his crimes.
In granting him a release, SPA said Mehajer had completed all possible programs in prison.
It determined his rehabilitation was better served in the community under the supervision of a psychologist and community corrections officers.
His parole conditions include being of good behaviour, and ongoing treatment from a private psychologist.
Mehajer first made headlines with his over-the-top wedding in 2015, when a reported $1million of gaudy excess closed off a Sydney street.
Mehajer and his young bride 'Aysha' - former Wollongong beautician April Learmonth - were married amid a procession of Harley Davidsons, rented Lamborghinis, a helicopter overhead, and a reception with 10,000 red roses and gold-dusted desserts.
The flashy party had been delayed until Salim's own father made his exit from prison, after being released early from a maximum three and half years stint in prison.
Mohamad Mehajer was convicted of conspiring to defraud the National Australia Bank of more than $3 million after attempting to bribe a bank employee to approve a loan that overstated the value of the family property company.
Mehajer staged a car crash in 2017 which led to him pleading guilty to 22 charges, including perverting the course of justice, and making a false call for an ambulance
Salim's marriage lasted a year. In 2016, Aysha took out a restraining order against him, and thereafter the attention-seeking fraudster became embroiled in legal and financial troubles.
Now its his dad's turn to help Salim, who he has previously described as 'the brain' of the family and 'the head of the family'.
In 2024, Salim pleaded guilty to his role in a bizarre car crash he had set up to avoid attending court on another matter, a stunt he was caught out on partly because of CCTV capturing his distinctive leg tattoos.
Mehajer pleaded guilty to 22 charges, including perverting the course of justice, making a false representation resulting in a police investigation, making a false call for an ambulance and negligent driving.
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Now, I had a faint feeling that if any Carlton or Collingwood supporters were on the jury - and considering they're the two biggest sporting clubs in the country it was a huge chance - then they might have wanted to get the verdict done so they could go to the game. Maybe not a Carlton supporter - you could've kept me locked away for a year and I wouldn't have minded - but a Collingwood supporter, they would be keen as mustard to get to the 'G. In fact, there was a Collingwood supporter on the jury, a big one at that, but the jury failed to reach a verdict and they were holed up on the night of the big game. However, the Collingwood supporter was granted special access to watch the game on Kayo while under the supervision of a jury keeper. Even footy with its vast tentacles managed to reach inside the Erin Patterson murder trial. Unfortunately, another juror who supported a smaller club was denied permission to watch their team play, but that's how influential Collingwood is. Now, when I realised the jury was staying at Bridges, I predicted deliberations would go for three weeks. It was a complex case to decide and I'm sure the jury conducted themselves beyond reproach, but a juror or two would've relished the quality and service at Bridges. Comfortable, quiet, self-contained rooms with ensuite and kitchen, aircon (not that it was needed in Traralgon) and heating, comfortable and large flat screen TVs were the norm for guests. But the pièce de résistance, the cherry on top, the jewel in the crown at Bridges was the access to four or five really good restaurants which delivered to your room, courtesy of the hotel. I tell you, Hog's Breath, local Thai joint Zaab Zaab and Goodfella's Pizza wouldn't have seen more business than they did in those 11 weeks. I'm sure jurors had access to these and various other restaurants at their fingertips during their five nights at Gippsland's best hotel. Throw in the full cooked and continental breakfast - which included pancakes - and one may come to enjoy their time at Bridges. Now I'm not suggesting anything, but you put someone like myself on that jury, who has nothing better to do, and a gruelling task could start to seem like a holiday. Listen to this as a theory. The jury deliberated from Monday June 30 to Monday July 7. This included deliberations on Saturday July 5, the day after the Carlton game. What is not known is why the jury had to shift out of Bridges Saturday morning and stay at a vastly inferior motel deeper east into Gippsland. Just after lunch, on Monday July 7, after spending two nights in the new motel, and at the earliest possible opportunity, the jury reached its verdict. The reason the jury was shunted was because of the 2025 National Table Tennis Championships which were held at the Gippsland Regional Indoor Sports Stadium Traralgon. I knew because I was dealing with the Daily Mail's accommodation situation that the table tennis competition had booked out 29 rooms ten months in advance at Bridges. So it's a strong possibility the Table Tennis Championships had a direct bearing on a monumental moment in the history of the world. I don't want to seem flippant. Erin Patterson is a multiple murderer, the tragedy she caused has crippled her family and clearly would've crushed her children. Don and Gail Patterson and Heather Wilkinson died and a pastor Ian Wilkinson almost died after spending several harrowing weeks in an ICU. Estranged husband Simon Patterson was invited to the deadly death-cap-laden beef Wellington lunch but did not attend. A large family has been torn apart and a community has suffered, but work needed to be done. Journalists needed to cover the case, lawyers on both sides of the fence worked tirelessly for months and months, security were polite and professional and court staff, including the media team, toiled around the clock. The jury listened patiently for weeks to digest an extremely complex case and it's very likely they reached their guilty verdict when they did, simply because that's when they reached the verdict. But if there was a ray of sunshine in all this, it's the people of Gippsland especially those in Morwell and Traralgon who served, fed and met the needs of hundreds who swarmed their towns to cover the trial of the century. On behalf of the Daily Mail, I'd like to personally thank Bridges on Argyle, Steve and his staff for not only putting up with us (there was the matter of the spilt lasagne) but also their friendly and accommodating service throughout the entire 11-week period. I'm looking forward to staying there again. The Daily Mail Australia did not encounter or speak to any jury members, and all information contained within this article was obtained after the verdict was handed down and after the jury had departed Bridges.