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‘Worst idea': Grim texts before the shooting murder of Yusuf Nazlioglu
‘Worst idea': Grim texts before the shooting murder of Yusuf Nazlioglu

News.com.au

time01-05-2025

  • News.com.au

‘Worst idea': Grim texts before the shooting murder of Yusuf Nazlioglu

A man allegedly gunned down after he stole two luxury cars from a Sydney business told a friend the theft was the 'worst idea' on the day he died, a court has heard. Yusuf Nazlioglu was shot dead as he exited one of the vehicles in a basement carpark in Rhodes on June 27, 2022, when a hooded man opened fire. The jury presiding in the NSW Supreme Court trial of three men charged with his murder have been told the failure to return two Mercedes Mr Nazlioglu had hired may provide 'some explanation and motive' for the shooting. Last week, the jury was shown messages Mr Nazlioglu sent an associate on the encrypted app Threema in the lead up to his death. Those messages, the court heard, were found on a phone examined by police on June 28, 2022 – with a screenshot showing the texts were sent 'yesterday'. In the messages, the 40-year-old discussed the stolen Mercedes with an associate who mentioned falling out with 'mates' over the incident. 'These two cars was dumb idea,' the associate wrote. Mr Nazlioglu agreed, saying it was 'the worst idea lol especially when there is money owed' before revealing he had been 'very emotional' recently. 'Sometimes I don't want to be around no more,' he wrote. Mr Nazlioglu said his wife Jade Jeske, known as Jade Heffer at the time, had said it 'was the worst idea and the worst plan and I agreed with her'. Both men said they looked like 'dirty c***s' among their associates, who Mr Nazlioglu thought 'loved me and had a lot of respect for me' before what he called a 'straight rip'. He also said another person, involved in the scheme, 'pretended to be me' on the phone and told someone chasing the vehicles 'you not getting the cars back'. 'We should not of agreed to do it brother its (sic) a s*** go especially to mates,' the associate replied. Mr Nazlioglu, who the court heard was acquitted Comanchero boss Mick Hawi's 2018 murder, was shot eight times at his Walker St apartment block. The court has been shown crime scene images of a black Mercedes E-class allegedly at the centre of his death riddled with bullet holes. It was hired alongside a white G-class from a western Sydney business on May 17 and 18, 2022 respectively with the help of his wife. Earlier in the trial, the jury was shown CCTV footage of hooded and masked men entering the carpark and taking back the car on May 23. Then, on May 26, CCTV captured Mr Nazlioglu stealing it again after its owner parked the vehicle on Castlereagh St in the CBD. Crown Prosecutor Eric Balodis said Ms Jeske had noticed the black Mercedes while its owner was streaming live on TikTok from the location. Mr Nazlioglu, who still had the key, was later caught on camera unlocking the E-class and driving away from the scene. The men on trial – Abdulrahman Atteya, Mohammed Hosni Khaled and Mohammed Baltagi – have pleaded not guilty and deny any part in the shooting. The Crown alleges that although they held no personal animosity toward Mr Nazlioglu, they were acting for unknown persons. Mr Atteya is accused of being one of two men who lay in wait inside a Volkswagen Golf for Mr Nazlioglu at the carpark on the night he died. He is accused of being either the shooter or the getaway co-accused denies allegations that they helped in preparing getaway vehicles. Mr Atteya's barrister, David Dalton SC, told the jury his client was not involved at any stage and that Mr Nazlioglu had several enemies. 'Mr Nazlioglu had only been released (from prison) for some couple of months before he was in fact killed himself and there will be evidence, that as far as he was concerned, a number of people wanted to kill him.' The trial before Justice Deborah Sweeney continues.

Court shown moment Yusuf Nazlioglu stole luxury car before his murder
Court shown moment Yusuf Nazlioglu stole luxury car before his murder

News.com.au

time23-04-2025

  • News.com.au

Court shown moment Yusuf Nazlioglu stole luxury car before his murder

A jury has been shown the moment a man brazenly stole a luxury Mercedes from Sydney's CBD about a month before he was shot dead in an underground carpark. Yusuf Nazlioglu was gunned down in front of his wife after parking beneath his Rhodes apartment on June 27, 2022. Three men – Abdulrahman Atteya, Mohammed Hosni Khaled and Mohammed Baltagi – are on trial before the NSW Supreme Court, accused of roles in the 40-year-old's death. All three have pleaded not guilty and deny any part in the shooting. The jury has been told Mr Nazlioglu, who was formerly acquitted of murdering Comanchero boss Mick Hawi, hired two Mercedes vehicles from a western Sydney company in May 2022. 'Mr Nazlioglu did not return these vehicles,' Crown prosecutor Eric Balodis said during the trial's opening last week. The Crown alleges this provided 'some explanation and motive' for his murder. A message was passed on to Mr Nazlioglu's wife, then known as Jade Heffer, that a black E-class needed to be returned before the car was 'reported stolen or worse'. The business had Ms Heffer's driver's license on file, and men arrived at the couple's apartment on Walker St, Rhodes, on May 23. Footage played to the court showed a number of men wearing masks or hooded jumpers in the carpark before finding the car and driving it away. The court has heard that on May 26, the car's owner recorded a livestream on TikTok while on Castlereagh St in Sydney CBD. Ms Heffer saw the stream and spotted the car in the video. Mr Balodis said the owner, who is not accused of wrongdoing, was 'quite dedicated to TikTok' at the time and Ms Heffer recognised the area he was in due to its proximity to high-end jewellery stores. Mr Nazlioglu and his wife still had a key to the vehicle, the court heard, and about 40 minutes later they arrived on the scene in a white Mercedes. CCTV captured Mr Nazlioglu jump out of the white car and run over to the E-class before unlocking it, getting into the driver's seat and speeding off. The jury has also watched footage of the moment Mr Nazlioglu was shot eight times, and Ms Heffer – now known as Jade Jeske – gave evidence of what she heard and saw. She recounted seeing a man running toward her then-husband armed with a firearm before hearing 'about eight' shots. 'I knew that he was going to be dead,' she told the court. 'I didn't go and touch him or go over to him. I looked at him.' Mr Nazlioglu died the following day in hospital, the court was told. Mr Balodis said in his opening remarks that prosecutors do not allege the men on trial had personal 'animosity' toward Mr Nazlioglu, and that his murder was organised by unknown persons. Prosecutors allege Mr Atteya was either the shooter or the driver of a Volkswagen Golf used by the assassins on June 27, 2022. The other man believed to be in the car has left Australia, the court has heard. Mr Atteya's barrister, David Dalton SC, told the jury his client was not involved at any stage of the murder plot and that Mr Nazlioglu had several enemies. 'Mr Nazlioglu had only been released (from prison) for some couple of months before he was in fact killed himself and there will be evidence, that as far as he was concerned, a number of people wanted to kill him.' Mr Khaled and Mr Baltagi were not at the scene, the court was told, but are accused of preparing getaway vehicles including e-scooters to help the assailants flee. The trial before Justice Deborah Sweeney continues.

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