‘The George Alex 12’ reportedly blindsided as police seized assets worth millions

·

Alleged members of construction identity George Alex’s alleged $17 million tax fraud scheme were apparently ‘blindsided’ by the raids undertaken by police on July 21.

According to documents released by the Queensland Supreme Court, 12 people accused of being involved in the alleged syndicate were given almost no notice that the Australian Federal Police were applying to the court to freeze 99 individual assets that the police allege were funded by the proceeds of crime.

By the end of the proceedings on July 17, The George Alex 12 were ordered by the court to surrender control of millions of dollars worth of assets, The Daily Telegraph reports.

Read More: Construction figure George Alex arrested over money laundering, tax evasion

This included 14 properties, starting with Mr Alex’s waterfront apartment on the Gold Coast and a Sydney mansion in Earlwood worth $2.5 million, owned by a company linked to the construction identity.

Details on all the assets seizures can now be revealed after a non-publication order on their existence was lifted last week.

ARRESTS-and-CHARGES

Police applied for the assets to be frozen on July 17, but the existence of the case was prevented from being revealed by a non publication order.

The order was in place because the police investigation, known as Operation Bordelon, was preparing to make pre-dawn raids in New South Wales, Queensland and the ACT, four days later that would result in 12 people being charged.

Lawyers for the police explained to the court that the order had to be kept a secret — including from the 12 people who were about to have their assets frozen — to prevent them from either hiding or offloading the assets.

It was for this reason that police lawyers explained that the application to freeze the assets had to be heard without giving any of the 12 targets notice that the case was actually happening, court documents said.

Arthur Alex leaves Southport Watchhouse in Queensland. Picture: Glenn Hampson/The Daily telegraph

Mr Alex was alleged to be the leader of the syndicate that used labour hire and payroll companies to defraud the ATO. Millions of dollars were then allegedly transferred to Australian accounts controlled by other accused syndicate members.

Alex’s 22-year-old son, Arthur was charged with conspiring to cause a loss to the Commonwealth and intentionally deal with proceeds of crime, money or property worth $1,000,000 or more. He is yet to enter a plea.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Celebrate Greek Easter at Stix Hellenic Taverna in Sydney

Stix Hellenic Taverna invites Sydney diners to celebrate Greek Easter with a generous shared menu and traditional flavours.

Cultural diversity shines at St Andrew’s Grammar for vibrant Harmony Day

Unity, diversity and shared identity was on full display at St Andrew’s Grammar as the school community came together to celebrate Harmony Day.

Hellenic spirit shines at St John’s College March 25 celebration

St John’s College in Preston, Victoria commemorated Greek Independence Day with a lively, whole-school assembly.

Greek National Day celebrated in Burwood with music, dance and community spirit

Saint Nectarios Burwood in Sydney celebrated Greek National Day at a special community event hosted by Burwood Council.

Dean Kalimniou delivers inaugural 2026 lecture on Josef Eliya

The Jewish Hellenic Association of Victoria launched its 2026 program with a compelling and thoughtfully curated event in Melbourne.

You May Also Like

Schengen visa application fee hiked to €80

A trip to much of Europe has gone costlier from Sunday with an increase in Schengen visa fees to €80 from the current €60,...

From halloumi to hope: Festival celebrates Cypriot community and seeks resolution

The 4th Halloumi Festival in Brunswick, Victoria on Saturday, March 2 and Sunday, March 3, proved to be the most successful yet. Read more now

Archaeological site of Filerimos reopens on Rhodes

The archaeological site of Filerimos has reopened to the public this year on the beautiful Greek island of Rhodes.