“This is an organisation or a particular group ... that are prepared to kill and wipe out families,not just the one individual. And that’s what makes them so feared,” he said.
In late 2020,the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission – which at that point was part of Home Affairs – assessed that the Albanian mafia was expert in the “exploitation of visa programs” and were assisted by “professional facilitators,lawyers and Registered Migration Agents”.
Since 2000,an entire Albanian organised crime structure had established itself in Adelaide,with tentacles stretching across Australia,the commission concluded.
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It warned this mafia cell’s members had spent years obtaining temporary visas,citizenship and even federal government licences to work as migration agents.
In its briefing paper,the commission called for major reforms including the establishment of a multi-agency taskforce,increased vetting of migration agents,a significant boost to biometric border security checks and other changes to prevent the rorting of temporary visas.
More than two years later,Nixon demanded similar reforms in her report and warned that “abhorrent crimes” were being committed.
The Nixon report found that the Australian Border Force – the operational arm of Home Affairs – had “limited legislative powers to effectively investigate visa and migration fraud” and that the department had allocated far too few personnel to the task.
Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil said the Nixon report’s findings were significant and would contribute to systemic reform of the migration system.
In response to questions about the organised criminals rorting the system she said:“The standards of conduct and behaviour required of people in Australia on a visa are clear and rigorously enforced.”
A spokesperson for Home Affairs insisted the departments were “highly successful” in defending Australia from immigration threats,with only “isolated exceptions”.
Policing sources speaking anonymously said Albanian mafia cells in Sydney,Adelaide and Melbourne were suspected of importing tonnes of cocaine into Australia in partnership with the Calabrian mafia and Balkans crime lordVaso Ulic and then laundering their money via property,nightclubs and the flower trade.

Drug kingpin Vaso Ulic.Credit:AFP/Facebook
Those sources said the Albanian mafia was now competing with the Comanchero bikie gang as cocaine importers and had been linked to underworld deaths in South Australia and Sydney in the past six months.
O’Halloran said Albanian organised criminals were ambitious,capable of extreme violence and regarded by his detectives as highly dangerous.
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“They’re moving into other types of drugs,cocaine,methylamphetamine. They’ve also been involved in high-end burglaries on top-end properties. So where there’s an ability to gain profit,they’ll do that,” he said.
Fake passports,sham marriages
Home Truths,a major investigation by this masthead and60 Minutes,has tracked a number of specific cases that reveal how Albanian mafia figures obtained bridging visas after being caught with fake passports or in sham marriages and have then gone on to engage in serious crime.
Even after being convicted of criminal offences in Australian courts,some Albanian criminals have remained in Australia or been able to leave Australia and re-enter under new identities.

Albert Biba was convicted of manslaughter after shooting a man at a grow house.Credit:60 Minutes
Among the worst cases are Albanian gangsters and brothers Diego and Albert Biba. Albert arrived in Australia in August 2013 using a Greek passport and a false name.
Even though his fake identity was discovered,Biba was later granted several temporary visas under his real name.
In April 2014,court files reveal he married a woman in a sham wedding to apply for a partner visa,and when this was rejected,he used the visa appeal process to continue obtaining bridging visas for years.
Throughout this protracted legal trail,Albert Biba was trafficking drugs,according to police documents and confidential sources who are not authorised to speak publicly.
In April 2018,he successfully stalled his deportation inan appeal to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, claiming he feared for his life if he was sent home due to the anger of an ex-girlfriend’s family.
Two weeks later he shot dead 28-year-old Melbourne carpenter Andrew Toumayan.

Police investigate the shooting of Andrew Toumayan in April 2018.Credit:Fairfax Media
Toumayan had triggered a silent alarm as he tried to burgle one of Biba’s cannabis grow houses in suburban Melbourne.
Biba,who was carrying a gun,confronted Toumayan and shot him dead. Albert Biba was charged with murder,remanded in custody and later pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to 10 years in prison.
Toumayan’s mother Lena told the Victorian Supreme Court that in killing her son,Biba had caused immense trauma to her and her daughter.
“The killer killed three people[at the] same time,my son,my daughter and myself.[I] suffer every day of my life.”

Police seize cannabis plants from a Blackburn North home on August 20.Credit:Victoria Police
After Albert was jailed,his brother Diego Biba,who had also entered a sham relationship after arriving in Australia and embarked on a number of visa appeals to stall his deportation,stalked and threatened the homicide squad detectives who had jailed his brother.
Court files released to this masthead after a series of applications show Diego Biba tried to plant several kilograms of cocaine from the UK at the Melbourne home of a homicide squad detective.
He was arrested in August 2020 for stalking and intimidating the officer,offences to which he pleaded guilty in the Victorian County Court in April 2022. He has not been charged with any other offences,including drug-related offences.
Diego Biba was released into the community and retained his bridging visa for more than 12 months.

Diego Biba outside court.Credit:60 Minutes
Diego Biba’s visa was only cancelled by the home affairs minister last month after this masthead interviewed the Victoria Police about why criminals such as Diego Biba were able to enter and remain in Australia even after being convicted.
Home Affairs declined to comment on the Bibas’ cases.
Wanted for murders in Albania
In a separate case,Melbourne man Ilir Gavoci entered Australia in 2014 on a temporary visa and has remained here since,despite facing serious criminal charges in Albania.
In 2007,he was convicted of killing two people in his tavern in the Albanian city of Shkodër.
However,he was never arrested for the crime,and in 2012,prosecutors in the Albanian capital,Tirana,requested the sentence be annulled because Gavoci had never been detained over the matter.
In May 2020,Tirana prosecutors seized $400,000 that an associate was transferring to Gavoci’s account in Australia. Home Affairs declined to comment on Gavoci’s case and a lawyer for Gavoci did not respond to questions.
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A fourth case uncovered by Home Truths involves an Albanian national suspected of being a significant player in a crime syndicate in Melbourne,who was recently bailed on drug charges.
Police sources said the man – who used an alias to set up and run a string of cannabis grow houses – had committed serious crimes in Australia a decade ago but managed to re-enter the country using a false identity.
The sources said improved biometric testing would have prevented the man from re-entering Australia.
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