Just after lunchtime, the woman drove back to Mokbel’s sister’s house, pulling into the garage with no apparent sign of Mokbel but a large pile of items in the back seat.

The former gangland boss once boasted his own fashion label (cheekily named “LSD”) in his days running a multimillion-dollar drug empire. But on Saturday, he opted for low-key black sportswear, knowing the new accessory on his ankle – an electronic monitoring bracelet – would catch enough attention.

Having spent most of the past decade in Barwon Prison’s high-security units, Mokbel now faces a strict new bail regimen.

He is subject to about 30 conditions, including a curfew, daily reporting at his nearby police station – which he did just after 9.30am on Saturday – and a ban on using smartphones or encrypted apps.

Tracking his every move via his ankle bracelet is a private bail company, which Mokbel is paying $25,000 a year to keep him secure outside prison.

He cannot leave the state or go near any points of “international departure”.

Last time Mokbel was out on bail, almost 20 years ago, he orchestrated one of the most infamous escapes in Australian history – smuggling himself out of the country in a specially designed yacht – before being tracked down in Greece a year later, in a restaurant wearing a bad wig.

Mokbel and his companion in the car park of Northland Shopping Centre on Saturday.

Mokbel and his companion in the car park of Northland Shopping Centre on Saturday.Credit: Alex Coppel

Mokbel’s fame as one of the few surviving bosses of the original gangland war is expected to protect him on the streets of Melbourne, as a new and violent battle rages for control of the black-market tobacco trade.

But he may not be welcome everywhere. The well-known gambler was one of the first people ever banned from Crown Casino and helped spark a ban on suspected organised crime figures from racetracks when he attended Oaks Day at Flemington while on bail.

Just hours after walking free on bail on Friday afternoon, Mokbel visited the graves of his mother, Lora, and brother Milad, who both died while he was in jail.

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During Friday’s court hearing, his sister Saad agreed to put up a $1 million surety – $100,000 from a bank cheque and the rest in equity from a home in Yallambie – to secure her brother’s release.

Mokbel promised to abide by all the bail conditions, arguing he had strong ties to the community, including a long-term girlfriend. The court heard he was no longer the man he was, after surviving a serious assault in jail in 2019.

On Saturday, Gawy and her family were seen installing security cameras at the property.

Mokbel is the latest in a string of gangland figures to be awarded bail – or have their convictions thrown out – since it was revealed their lawyer Nicola Gobbo was also a secret informer for police, known as “Lawyer X”.

Mokbel’s ankle bracelet.

Mokbel’s ankle bracelet.Credit: Alex Coppel

With Ashleigh McMillan

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