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Angelo Pandeli: Hells Angels Boss Found On A Bali Private Jet

Today we are following a bikey file that moved far beyond Sydney.

It starts with a former Hell’s Angels figure years outside Australia and a private jet sitting on the runway in Bali.

Before we get into the details, if you enjoy Australian underworld cases, bikey figures, offshore fugitives, and police files that cross borders, make sure you subscribe to the channel, follow True Crime Aussie, too, and turn on notifications so you do not miss the next video.

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This channel looks at real Australian crime reporting carefully.

We do not tell these cases to make anyone look bigger than they are.

We follow the public record, the police updates, and the details that show how these networks can move from one country to another.

Today’s case is about Angelo Pandeli.

His name had been known in Australian bikey reporting for years.

He was a former Sydney Hell’s Angel’s boss, and by 2026, he was no longer living quietly inside Australia.

Then, Barley put his name back in the headlines.

A private jet was preparing to leave Indonesia.

The destination was Mozambique.

One passenger was traveling under another identity.

When immigration officers checked the plane, they found the man they were looking for inside the aircraft toilet.

That man was Angelo Pandeli.

On 6th June 2026, at Bali’s Ingurai International Airport, a private jet was getting ready to fly out to Mosambek.

Before the aircraft could leave, Indonesian immigration officers checked the passengers.

One man was using a Brazilian passport under the name GAM.

The passport immediately raised questions because authorities could not find a proper record showing how that passenger had entered Indonesia.

The flight was stopped for more checks.

Then things moved quickly.

Indonesian authorities said the passengers returned to the aircraft without permission.

The jet began preparing to leave, but air traffic control stopped it before takeoff.

Immigration officers boarded the plane and searched inside.

They found Angelo Pandelli in the aircraft toilet.

Pandeli was 55, an Australian and a former Sydney Hell’s Angels boss.

His name was not new to police reporting.

ABC reported that he had left Australia in 2018 before police searched his Piermont home in relation to a major drug investigation.

He was never charged over that matter, but his name later appeared in public reporting around the so-called Aussie cartel.

By the time he was found in Bali, the file had already moved through several places, Australia, Dubai, Indonesia, and now a private jet bound for Africa.

Indonesian officials said Pandeli was using a fake passport.

They also said he had been the subject of an Interpol notice.

After the airport stop, he was deported back to Australia and banned from re-entering Indonesia.

For viewers following Australian bikey cases, the Baralley arrest was not just a strange airport story.

It brought back an old Sydney name, a Hell’s Angel’s history, offshore movement, and the question of how long authorities had been watching before the jet was stopped.

In this video, we follow Angelo Pandeli from the Sydney Bikey World to his years overseas to the Bali airport stop that brought him back into Australian crime reporting.

Angelo Pandeli’s name had been around Sydney Bikey reporting long before Bali.

He was known as a former Hell’s Angels boss from the kind of circle police had watched for years.

clubouses, old associates, offshore contacts, and men who could leave Australia but still remain inside organized crime reporting.

Pandeli left Australia in 2018.

Soon after, police searched his Permont home in connection with a major drug investigation.

ABC reported he was never charged over that matter.

Still, the search kept his name close to a file that Australian authorities had been watching closely.

After that, Pandeli spent years outside Australia.

His name appeared in reporting around Dubai, offshore bikey figures, and the so-called Aussie cartel.

The Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission had alleged that network was linked to major drug importation routes into Australia.

Those claims had not become charges against Pandelli, but they kept his name in the same world.

Australian bikey figures living offshore, law enforcement watching from home, and international movements that were hard to follow from the outside.

By 2026, Pandelli was 55.

He was no longer just a name from old Sydney Bikey stories.

Indonesian authorities said he was traveling through Bali using a Brazilian passport under another identity.

They also said there was no proper record showing how that passenger had entered Indonesia.

That was where the airport stop began.

A private jet was preparing to leave Ingurai International Airport for Mosamb beek.

Immigration officers checked the passenger documents and held the flight for further questioning.

The situation turned quickly when authorities said the passengers returned to the aircraft without permission.

The jet never left.

Officers boarded the plane, searched the cabin, and found Pandelli inside the aircraft toilet.

After years offshore, his name was suddenly back in Australian headlines.

The scene had everything that follows a bikey file across borders, a former Hell’s Angels figure, a false passport, a private aircraft, Bali, Mosambique, and Australian authorities waiting for what came next.

Pandeli was deported back to Australia.

Indonesian officials also said he was banned from entering Indonesia again.

For police watchers, Barley did not create the Angelo Pandeli story.

It brought an old Sydney bikey name back into view.

This time through an airport stop that looked more like an international underworld file than a local arrest.

On 6th June 2026, the private jet was sitting at Gurayai International Airport in Bali, waiting to leave for Mosambique.

Before the aircraft could depart, Indonesian immigration officers checked the passengers.

One man was traveling with a Brazilian passport under the name GAM.

The name on the passport did not match the story officers were seeing in their system.

They could not find a clear record showing how that passenger had entered Indonesia.

That was enough to stop the flight and bring the passenger list under closer checking.

The plane did not leave.

Indonesian officials later said the passengers went back onto the aircraft without permission while checks were still underway.

Air traffic control then stopped the jet from taking off.

Immigration officers boarded the plane and searched inside.

There were other passengers in the cabin, but the man they were looking for was not sitting openly in a seat.

He was found inside the aircraft toilet.

Indonesian authorities later identified him as Angelo Pandaly, the former Sydney Hell’s Angels figure who had been outside Australia for years.

The details spread quickly because it was unusual even for a bikey file, a private jet in Bali, a flight plan to Mosambique, a Brazilian passport under another name, a man found hiding before the aircraft could leave.

Pandeli was then taken into immigration custody.

Officials said the passport was false and they later moved to deport him from Indonesia.

For Australian police watchers, Barley brought Pandeli’s name back very suddenly.

He had left Australia in 2018.

His name had appeared in reporting around offshore bikey figures and the so-called Aussie cartel.

But this time, the public detail was not coming from Sydney.

It came from an airport stop in Indonesia with immigration officers standing between him and another country.

The destination also raised attention.

Mosambique is far from the usual Australian bikey headlines.

That route gave the case a wider shape.

Sydney, Dubai, Bali, then a planned flight toward Africa.

Pandeli was eventually sent back to Australia.

Indonesian officials also banned him from entering Indonesia again.

By the time he landed back in Australia, the story had already taken hold.

A former Hell’s Angel’s boss, years offshore, stopped at a Bali airport while trying to leave on a private jet.

For a case that had been quiet for years, one passport check put Angelo Pandelli back in the center of Australian organized crime reporting.

The passport check started before the private jet left Bali.

The aircraft was sitting at Angura Ray International Airport on the 6th of 6th June 2026 preparing for a flight to Mosambique.

Indonesian immigration officers checked the passengers before departure and one document caught their attention.

It was a Brazilian passport.

The name on it was GAM.

Officers checked the system and could not find a proper record showing how that passenger had entered Indonesia.

That was the first problem.

A person leaving the country should have a clear entry record.

In this case, officials said the record was not there.

The flight was held.

Immigration officers wanted the passenger checked further before the jet could leave.

According to Indonesian authorities, the group then returned to the aircraft without permission while the process was still underway.

The jet began preparing for departure.

Air traffic control stopped it before takeoff.

When immigration officers boarded the plane, they searched the cabin first.

Three passengers were found inside the aircraft.

The person using the Brazilian passport was not sitting with them.

Officers continued searching.

They found Angelo Pandeli inside the aircraft toilet.

The discovery turned a passport issue into an international headline.

A former Sydney Hell’s Angel’s boss years away from Australia had been found on a private jet in Bali while the plane was preparing to leave for Africa.

Indonesian officials later said the passport was fake.

They also said Pandeli had no valid stay record in Indonesia.

That made the airport stop more serious.

It was no longer just about a passenger trying to leave on a private flight.

Indonesian authorities now had a man traveling under another identity, a document they said was false and no clear record of how he had entered the country.

Pandeli was taken into immigration custody.

His name was then confirmed publicly.

Australian reporting quickly connected the barley stop to his Hell’s Angel’s history, his years offshore and earlier organized crime reporting around his name.

The private jet never reached Mosambek.

Instead, the stop at Nurarayai airport brought Pandeli back into view after years outside Australia.

A passport check in Bali had done what years of rumors had not done publicly.

It placed Angelo Pandeli in front of authorities on a plane that was already preparing to leave.

Angelo Pandeli had been away from Australia for years before the Bali airport stop.

ABC reported that he left Australia in 2018.

Around that time, police searched his Permont home in Sydney.

During a major drug investigation, Pandeli was not charged over that matter.

After leaving Australia, his name kept appearing in reporting around Australian bikey figures living overseas.

Dubai was one of the places mentioned in public reports.

So was the so-called Aussie cartel, a group the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission had alleged was linked to major drug importation routes into Australia.

Pander’s background made the barley stop draw attention quickly.

He was a former Sydney Hell’s Angels boss.

He had been outside Australia for years.

His name had already been raised in offshore organized crime reporting.

Then Indonesian authorities said he was at Bali’s Enurai International Airport using a Brazilian passport under the name GAM.

That passport check changed the day.

The private jet was preparing to fly to Mosamb beek.

Immigration officers could not find a proper record showing how the passenger had entered Indonesia, so the flight was held for further checks.

Indonesian authorities later said the passengers returned to the aircraft without permission while the process was still underway.

Air traffic control stopped the plane before takeoff.

Officers boarded the private jet and searched inside.

They found Pandeli in the aircraft toilet.

After years away from Australia, he was now back in front of authorities.

Indonesian officials said the passport was fake.

They also said Pandeli had no valid stay record in Indonesia.

He was taken into immigration custody, then deported back to Australia.

Indonesia also banned him from re-entering the country.

When his name reached Australian headlines again, it was tied to a very specific scene.

Bali airport, a private jet, a false passport, and a flight to Mosambique that never left.

For people who had followed Sydney Bikey reporting, Angelo Pandeli was not a new figure, but the way he was stopped in Bali brought his name back with a new level of attention.

It connected his old Hell’s Angel’s history with years overseas, a passport under another identity, and an airport stop that Australian crime watchers were never going to ignore.

The name Aussie cartel began appearing in public reporting years before Angelo Pandelli was stopped in Bali.

In 2021, the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission alleged that Pandelli was connected to a network it called the Aussie Cartel.

ABC reported that authorities believed the group was linked to major drug importation routes into Australia.

Panderly was not charged over the old Piermont matter.

Even so, his name stayed close to reporting about Australian bikey figures living offshore.

These were not men being watched only around Sydney streets or clubouses.

Some had moved through places such as Dubai using distance contacts and overseas locations to stay outside the usual reach of Australian policing.

Pander’s name fitted that offshore pattern.

He had been a Sydney Hell’s Angels figure.

He left Australia in 2018.

Police later searched his Permont home during a major drug investigation, but no charge followed against him from that matter.

For years, his name stayed in the background of organized crime reporting.

Then Bali brought it back.

On 6th June 2026, Indonesian immigration officers were dealing with a private jet preparing to fly to Mozambique.

One passenger was using a Brazilian passport under the name GAM.

Officers could not find a proper record showing how that passenger had entered Indonesia.

The flight was held.

Indonesian authorities later said the passengers went back onto the aircraft without permission.

Air traffic control stopped the jet before it could leave.

Officers boarded the plane and found Pandeli inside the aircraft toilet.

That airport stop gave Australian reporters a new scene around an old bikey name.

It was no longer only about allegations from 2021 or a search in Permont years earlier.

Now there was a private aircraft in Bali, a passport authorities said was fake and a planned flight to Mosambique that never left the runway.

Pandeli was taken into immigration custody.

Indonesian officials later deported him back to Australia and banned him from re-entering Indonesia.

When he returned, ABC reported he was not facing Australian charges connected to the older investigation.

But his name had returned to the public through a very different route.

Not Sydney, not Dubai, but Bali, where one passport check stopped the flight and brought the former Hell’s Angels figure back into the headlines.

After the Bali airport stop, Angelo Pandeli was taken into immigration custody.

Indonesian officials had already checked the Brazilian passport under the name GAM.

They said the document was counterfeit.

They also said Pandeli had no valid record showing how he had entered Indonesia.

The private jet to Mozambique was no longer leaving.

Pandeli was now in the hands of Indonesian immigration and Australian officials were involved.

ABC reported that Indonesian authorities said he was deported after a direct request from the Australian embassy.

Indonesian officials also said he was the subject of an Interpol notice and identified him as an influential figure in a transnational serious organized crime network.

Those words put the barley stop back into the biky world he had been linked to for years.

Pandeli was a former Sydney Hell’s Angels boss.

His name had appeared in reporting around offshore figures Dubai and the so-called Aussie cartel.

The ACIC had alleged that network was connected to major drug importation routes into Australia.

Pandeli had not been charged over the old Pmon matter, but in Bali the issue was no longer an old Sydney search.

It was the passport, the private jet, the missing entry record, and the attempt to leave Indonesia before immigration finished checking him.

Indonesian authorities moved quickly after the aircraft was stopped.

Pandeli was removed from the plane, processed through immigration custody, and sent back to Australia.

Officials also said he was banned from entering Indonesia again.

That ban closed Bali as a place he could return to.

The airport scene gave Australian crime reporting a clear picture.

A former Hell’s Angels figure years offshore stopped at an international airport while trying to leave on a private aircraft under another identity.

For people who followed bikey cases in Sydney, Pander’s return was not quiet.

His name came back through headlines, airport footage, Indonesian statements, and questions about where he had been since leaving Australia.

When he landed back in Australia, the public record still had two sides.

There were strong allegations around his name in organized crime reporting.

There was also the fact that ABC reported he was not facing Australian charges connected to the old investigation.

That is why the next stage of the Angelo Pandeli case was not about Barley anymore.

It was about what Australian authorities could do after he was finally back on Australian soil.

When Angelo Pandeli was sent back to Australia, the Bali chapter was already over.

Indonesian authorities had stopped the private jet, checked the Brazilian passport, removed him from the aircraft, and placed him in immigration custody.

They later deported him, and banned him from entering Indonesia again.

ABC reported he was flown back to Adelaide.

That detail gave the case a strange ending.

A former Sydney Hell’s Angels boss who had been outside Australia for years was suddenly back on Australian soil because of an airport stop in Bali.

But his return did not mean the old Australian allegations had turned into charges.

ABC reported Pandeli was not facing Australian charges connected to the earlier investigation.

The Permont search, the Aussie cartel reporting, and the old offshore allegations remained part of the background around his name, but they were not the same as a charge before an Australian court.

That legal gap matters in how the case is told.

Pandeli’s name carried weight in Bikey reporting.

Indonesian officials spoke about an Interpol notice.

Australian reporting connected him to the Hell’s Angels, Offshore Movement, Dubai, and the Aussie cartel allegations.

But once he was back in Australia, the public still had to separate what had been alleged from what had been proven.

The Bali case itself was clearer.

Authorities said he was traveling under a false Brazilian passport.

They said there was no proper record of his entry into Indonesia.

They said he was found inside the aircraft toilet after the private jet was stopped before departure.

Those details were not rumors from Sydney streets.

They came from the airport stop.

For Australian law enforcement, having Pandeli back in the country gave them access they did not have while he was overseas.

They could speak to him, watch his movements, and deal with any immigration or intelligence matters through Australian channels.

But the public did not get a clean final answer.

There was no dramatic courtroom finish, no old case suddenly solved in one afternoon.

No public explanation of where he had been living, who arranged the private flight, or how the Brazilian passport came into his hands.

What Barley did was bring him back into view.

After years offshore, Angelo Pandeli’s name returned through one stopped flight, one passport check, and one private jet that never made it to Mosambique.

By the time Angelo Pandeli landed back in Australia, the Bali airport story had already traveled further than the private jet ever did.

The aircraft was meant to leave Nuraray International Airport for Mosamb beek.

Instead, it stayed on the ground while Indonesian immigration officers checked a Brazilian passport under the name Gam.

That check led officers back onto the plane.

They did not find Pandeli sitting in the cabin.

They found him inside the aircraft toilet.

for a former Sydney Hell’s Angels boss who had spent years outside Australia.

That one moment brought his name straight back into Australian crime reporting.

Indonesian officials said the passport was fake.

They said there was no clear record showing how he had entered Indonesia.

They also said he had been the subject of an Interpol notice.

After the airport stop, Pandeli was taken into immigration custody, deported to Australia, and banned from returning to Indonesia.

He came back to a country he had left in 2018.

ABC reported he was not facing Australian charges connected to the old Permont investigation.

That part needs to stay clear.

His name had been raised in serious organized crime reporting, but those older reports were not the same as a charge before an Australian court.

What Barley did was put him back where Australian authorities could see him.

A former Hell’s Angels figure years offshore, a private jet, a false passport allegation.

A flight to Mosamb beek stopped before takeoff.

For people following Australian bikey cases, the Pandeli file shows how far these names can move after they leave Sydney.

The story did not end at a clubhouse or a police raid at home.

It reached an airport in Indonesia, a private aircraft, and an immigration check that changed the whole day.

Angelo Pandeli’s name is now back in the public record.

The old questions around offshore bikey networks, Dubai links, and the so-called Aussie cartel allegations have not disappeared.

But the clearest part of this file is what happened in Bali.

The passport check, the stopped flight, the search inside the jet, and the deportation back to Australia.

If you want more Australian bikey and underworld files like this, subscribe to True Crime Aussie 2.

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And tell us in the comments, do you think the Bali airport stop was luck or were authorities already watching long before that jet tried to