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BJØRKELANGEN (Dagbladet): On April 1 of this year, the MC Satudarah gang signed the lease that secured the 1% international club a hangout in Bjørkelangen, an hour outside of Oslo.
A 36-year-old drug and violence convict who escaped from jail earlier this year is reportedly the leader of Satudarah at the Oslo branch of the dreaded MC club. Dagbladet has tried to contact the 36-year-old man. through the husband’s attorney, but has been unsuccessful. According to the judge, several of the members of the MC club are also convicted of crimes similar to those of 36 years.
After the MC club moved into the dilapidated building, the police kept the network under surveillance and now fear conflicts with other established clubs and criminal settings.
Dagbladet has been in contact with several in the generally family neighborhood. They express agitation and horror in the presence of the MC club.
But a man cannot be afraid.
– They thought they came to a toothless township with a closed sheriff’s office, but here they meet me and a whole community that wants them away, says former Bjørkelangen sheriff Svein Engen.
Fear of war
Dagbladet met with the police veteran in front of the Satudarah clubhouse in downtown Bjørkelangen. He leaned against the uniformed car parked in front of the yellow shopping room. With folded arms and a severe look.
Svein Engen had just broken a sticker with the MC club logo and affixed his own business card to the door. He does not want the criminal gang to spread fear among the people in his town.
– These are violent people and what I’m afraid of here is a gang deal. We shouldn’t have a war on an open street, says Engen, who is now a police contact for the Aurskog-Høland municipality.
Police fear conflict with other criminal settings. Both gangs and other motorcycle clubs.
Dagbladet Plus
Dagbladet knows that the new MC club, which has been established in eastern Norway, is not welcome. Neither among other established criminals nor with the police.
– If someone wants to take them away, they come here, says Svein Engen.
Serious violence
Members of the MC-club have been present at the facility this weekend, but Dagbladet knows that the police have visited the yellow commercial building on several occasions and searched who is present. The agency also stopped several cars on the way to Bjørkelangen, with a message to return to Oslo.
Several of the members are convicted local people and Engen has no doubts about the potential for violence.
– Last year, two of the club members were convicted of serious violence when they broke into an 80-year-old man and beat him helplessly for 1,000 crowns and a watch. They have not yet been called to jail and have now become members of the club that has a meeting place here, says Engen, shaking his head.
Furthermore, Svein Engen fears recruitment among the youth of the municipality.
– We have received reports that 10-12 Russian girls were here at the party. We are concerned, says Engen.
– We will not give them peace, while they are in Bjørkelangen, says Svein Engen.
decisions
Also at the Aurskog-Høland town hall, the establishment of the clubhouse has caught the eye.
As early as 2012, the municipal council made the decision that 1% of the clubs are unwanted in the municipality.
– That decision will be repeated on Wednesday May 13, writes city manager Inger Hegna, in an email to Dagbladet.
Furthermore, Hegna writes that the municipality can apply legal rules in the Planning and Construction Law and in the Fire and Explosion Protection Law so that Satudarah is removed from Bjørkelangen.
– We will follow the opportunities that the municipality has within the current legislation. The municipality also works closely with the police, writes Hegna.
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