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Nik Radev

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 203.219.255.133 (talk) at 08:41, 15 June 2009 (the car is not a C200 convertible. No such thing. It was a CLK, however the exact model and cylinder capacity is not known.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Nikolai Radev
Nikolai "The Russian" Radev
Other namesThe Russian
Conviction(s)armed robbery, assault, blackmail, extortion

Nikolai "The Russian" Radev (January 29, 1959 - April 15,2003) was a Bulgarian refugee who became known as a career criminal in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

During his life he was jailed for assault, blackmail, threats to kill, extortion, firearm offences, armed robbery and drug charges.[1] According to police he was an enforcer for the Melbourne head of the Russian mafia, robbing drug dealers.[2]

Radev was shot and killed in Queen St Coburg on April 15, 2003 in a series of similar events that are commonly referred to as the Melbourne gangland killings.

He was shot seven times in the head and chest in front of his bodyguard after he stood out from his black convertible CLK Mercedes Benz coupé. A third person in Nic Radev's entourage was driving a light green 2000 Toyota Camry CSI sedan parked directly in front of his Mercedes Benz near the corner of Queen & Reynard Streets, Coburg also witnessed the murder.[citation needed]

Victoria Police told The Age that they believed his death was planned by a father and son drug manufacturing team, and a hitman suspected of four other murders carried out the killing in a red Falcon XR6 Turbo sedan. His associates Damien Cossu and Alfonso Traglia were with Radev at the time of the murder but claimed they could not identify the gunman, and were subsequently named by police as 'persons of interest'.[3]

Despite only having worked for eight months during the 1980s at a fish and chip shop, Radev was killed wearing Versace clothing and a $20,000 watch, and was laid to rest in a gold-plated coffin.[citation needed]

Victoria Police suspected Andrew Veniamin and Carl Williams were behind the killing.[4] He was portrayed by Don Hany in the Australian TV series Underbelly.

References

  1. ^ Wise guys, tough guys, dead guys John Silvester, The Age December 14, 2003
  2. ^ Why gangland's bloody code is hard to crack John Silvester, The Age April 20, 2003
  3. ^ Six named in underworld investigations Steve Butcher, The Age December 23, 2003
  4. ^ New lead in Bulgarian Nik's killing John Silvester The Age December 13, 2003