Yildiray Kaymaz

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yildiray Kaymaz , alias Ali Osman (born December 25, 1975 ) is a German rocker of Turkish descent and the former president of the Satudarah MC in Duisburg, which was banned in 2015 .

As MC president

Yildiray Kaymaz is considered to be one of the first rockers to speak in public of a "rocker war". In an interview, he announced that the hostile Hells Angels MC in Duisburg will soon no longer exist, as has also happened in the Netherlands.

Drug and arms trafficking

Yildiray Kaymaz was President of MC Satudarah Duisburg. He and other members were involved in drug and arms trafficking.

He and his "Secretary" Baris Tepe bought weapons suitable for war in the Netherlands , including an AK74 with two magazines and 1130 rounds. Between May 2012 and April 2013, the two helped organize the importation of around 21 kilograms of marijuana and up to two kilograms of cocaine .

In August 2013, on instructions from Kaymaz and Tepe, a man is said to have thrown a hand grenade at the clubhouse of the hostile Hells Angels MC in Duisburg-Rheinhausen . According to the investigation, Kaymaz and Tepe are said to have equipped another club member with a submachine gun. So armed, this man fired thirteen shots in the “Beecker Café”, a restaurant run by the Hells Angels.

Investigations

The investigations by the North Rhine-Westphalia police lasted for several months and were largely conducted undercover. In addition to observations, the rooms and means of communication of those involved were bugged. The Duisburg club called "Brotherhood Clown Town" joined the Satudarah MC in the Netherlands in June 2012. According to police information, this had to do with the expectation that better and cheaper drugs would be found there.

The police recruited an informant named Christian J. within the Duisburg Satudarah Club. The trained welder and former Foreign Legionnaire was part of the club's management team. He is in a witness protection program. He was also investigated for drug smuggling and the importation of two Scorpion type submachine guns . It remained unclear whether he had really been an undercover agent or just a paid informant for the police.

process

In 2015, the trial of Kaymaz and other members of the club began. The prosecution listed 15 crimes in the indictment, including two attacks.

In the trial before the Duisburg regional court , 90 witnesses, including 36 police officers, testified. Although motorcycle rockers generally strictly refuse to cooperate with the police, even if they have been the victims of a crime, Kaymaz testified about himself and that of other club members. He made a full confession and testified under the Leniency Notice . In his statements, Kaymaz had also revealed the names of the people behind it. The reason for the willingness to cooperate was supposedly a life-threatening illness of his son. The result of the cooperation was a shorter prison term.

The district court in Duisburg sentenced Kaymaz to six and a half years in prison. The judges based their verdict on his drug and arms trade.

Individual evidence

  1. Satudarah Trial in Duisburg: A deep look into the rocker milieu . In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung . ISSN  0174-4909 ( faz.net [accessed April 19, 2016]).
  2. Duisburg Satudarah gang: He was the spy in the rock gang. In: Spiegel Online. Retrieved April 19, 2016 .
  3. ^ Trial in Duisburg: Six and a half years imprisonment for ex-rocker boss. In: Spiegel Online. Retrieved April 19, 2016 .
  4. ^ Spiegel report on the process