
Once a feared bikie boss, protection racketeer, and legendary Kings Cross enforcer, Sam Ibrahim now lives in near seclusion with his ailing mother in Sydney’s western suburbs after escaping deportation to Lebanon.
Hassam ‘Sam’ Ibrahim was once an intimidating presence across the city but now spends his days at his mother Wahiba’s fortress-like mansion in Merrylands.
Wahiba, 77, is said to be in poor health following a battle with cancer over a decade ago and more recent hospitalisations.
Sam Ibrahim, now 59, rarely leaves the house, in marked contrast to the free-wheeling life he once lived as the leader of the Nomads bikie gang and convicted gun-runner.
Last month, he briefly appeared at the front door wearing a plush white bathrobe, white socks, and Nike Air slides. He politely declined to speak when approached by Daily Mail Australia.
Later that day, friends of notorious Kings Cross bodyguard ‘Tongan Sam’ – who lives across the street – delivered KFC to the home. A family minder then visited, before chauffeuring a frail Wahiba away in a black Porsche GTS.
Despite past underworld whispers that Sam planned to ‘live like a king in Lebanon’ spending the millions he made in Sydney, he is now believed to be struggling.
His fall from power has been dramatic.
Once a feared bikie boss, protection racketeer, and legendary Kings Cross enforcer, Sam Ibrahim is now living a reclusive life with his ailing mother in the Sydney suburbs (pictured above)

The former Nomads outlaw motorcycle gang leader, who later became a gun runner, answered the door of his mother’s house wearing a plush white bathrobe and politely declined to comment

Sam Ibrahim, once a dominant presence in Kings Cross and Sydney’s western suburbs, now spends most of his time inside his mother’s fortress-like mansion, living off food deliveries and rarely venturing outside
Sam served nearly six years of a nine-year sentence for firearms and drug offences after being caught running a supply ring with ex–Rose Tattoo drummer Paul DeMarco.
After being paroled in 2020, immigration authorities tried to deport the Lebanon-born Ibrahim back to the Middle Eastern country, bundling him into a van and flying him to immigration detention in Perth.
He spent three years in detention – first in WA, then on Christmas Island – before his lawyer secured his release under a High Court ruling that deemed indefinite immigration detention unlawful.
He quietly returned to Sydney in late 2023, welcomed by his nephew Harley, lawyer William Levingston, and Tongan Sam.
He moved back into his mother’s compound, which was built on the site of the family’s original housing commission home, originally purchased by his brother John, and has rarely been seen since.
Upon returning to the Merrylands house, Sam visited the grave of his father, who had died while he was in prison.
‘I went to pay my respects,’ Sam said later. He said authorities had told him in Perth, ‘We can’t deport you, you haven’t had a case (in court) for three years’.

The Ibrahim brothers Sam, Michael, and John (pictured above) have had very different paths: Sam has faced deportation to Lebanon, Michael has spent decades in prison for drug importation, while John has found success as a scriptwriter and property developer

Wearing Nike Air slides with white socks and a bathrobe, former Kings Cross enforcer Sam Ibrahim is now holed up in his mother’s mansion, outfitted with security cameras and motion-activated lights

Matriarch Wahiba Ibrahim lives in a sprawling five-bedroom mansion, built on the same Merrylands block where she once raised her six children in a humble housing commission home
He said at the time that he would abide by the multiple condition of his release, some of which have since been relaxed or changed.
Under the conditions imposed in 2023, he can’t learn to fly a plane, work in a pool shop, accept more than $10,000 from anyone, or socialise with people who have even considered committing a crime.
He was also banned from possessing guns, explosives or instructions on how to use them.
Sam was also required to notify the government ‘within two days’ if he has contact with an ‘individual, group or organisation that is alleged, or is known by (Ibrahim) to be engaging in criminal or illegal activities’.
After being released from immigration detention, Sam said people close to him had told him to ‘stay out of trouble,’ and he had promised, ‘Of course I will.’
‘I’m not going to do anything wrong. I’m not like I used to be 20 years ago. I’ve been out of bikie clubs for 20 years. It’s so long ago that’s not me,’ Sam said previously.
However despite those comments, he is due to face Downing Centre Local Court later this year over an Apprehended Violence Orders taken out against himself and his younger brother Fadi on behalf of Fadi’s longtime business partner, Benjamin Scott.
The AVOs were taken out last December following a phone call from Fadi after an alleged falling out over money.

At one point, a young man wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with ‘TONGA’ delivered a bucket of KFC to both Sam and Semi ‘Tongan Sam’ Nagata, who lives across the road

Police march Sam Ibrahim off for deportation to Lebanon in 2020, but instead he languished in a Perth detention centre and on Christmas Island until his lawyer successfully argued he be released under a High Court ruling

A despondent Sam in the back of a prison van as he believed he was about to be sent back to Lebanon – a country he hadn’t seen in 50 years
It is understood Sam Ibrahim was in on the call.
His brother John has flourished, transitioning from Cross identity to successful property developer, author, and creator of Last King of the Cross.
Sam, by contrast, now lives in semi-isolation and remains tethered to legal restrictions. At one point, he was fitted with a tracking anklet, though it’s unclear whether it remains in place.
The compound has seen its share of violence. In January 2011, Sam was shot twice in a drive-by shooting outside the house. Just weeks earlier, the Ryde home of his sister, Armani Stelio, was also targeted.
In 2017, during preparations for the wedding of Sam’s nephew Sam Sayour to Aisha Mehajer (sister of jailed developer Salim Mehajer), Tongan Sam was shot in the back near the family homes.
Sam’s humble new life in Merrylands is a long way from his early days in the Cross, where he forged a fearsome reputation running collections for notorious standover man Louis Bayeh.
In the 1980s Kings Cross was a nest of strip clubs, bars, nightclubs, brothels, gambling dens and porn stores run by criminals like Bayeh, Lenny McPherson and Bruce Galea.
Business owners had to pay racketeers like Bayeh up to $1000-a-week to to stop criminals robbing their joints and to pay gaming and vice squad coppers to turn a blind eye.
Sam became the ‘the number one collections guy in the protections racket’, and when John Ibrahim gravitated to the Cross and eventually opened his nightclub, Tunnel Cabaret, it was Sam who appointed Tongan Sam his bodyguard.

John Ibrahim (centre) with Semi ‘Tongan Sam’ Nagata (left) have known each other for decades during the time Ngata acted as a bodyguard for the ‘last king of the Cross’

John Ibrahim is the success story of the clan and now a wealthy property developer who lives in Sydney’s eastern suburbs with his glamorous fiancée Sarah Budge and their child

Sam lives with his mother in lives in the family compound in Merrylands, constructed and paid for by John on the site of their old housing commission home
In his book Last King of the Cross, John Ibrahim affectionately recalls how he was hypnotically drawn to a life in the Cross via his big brother’s career which started there in the 1980s.
John said Sam had become head of the family when his father left for long periods of time and their mother subsisted on a single mother’s pension.
Sam had attained his sixth dan black belt as a Taekwondo champion, and was ‘that legendary person with the balls to walk up to ten men and tear them apart. The hardest of hard men fear him’.
A sixth dan Taekwondo black belt and natural leader, Sam became the ‘number one collections guy in the protection racket,’ according to John Ibrahim.
‘My big brother Sam was a really funny and charismatic person, a natural leader,’ John wrote in Last King of the Cross.
‘He doesn’t need cocaine – he’s a natural. Cocaine is taken by people to feel more confident, sexier and capable of anything.
‘Sam doesn’t need that boost because he’s already all of the above.
‘Every bad decision, every catastrophe that had fallen upon him and our family, all started after his introduction to cocaine.
‘My brother pressed the ‘f*** it’ button that first line of cocaine he had.’