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The infamous Finks biker gang shot a bizarre rap video starring the former leader of a white supremacist group just days after hundreds of members completed their ‘national race’ in Victoria.
Jarrad Searby’s ‘Never Lose Faith in a Fink’, who performs under the stage name Jazza 66, was posted on YouTube on Tuesday and is riddled with rude lyrics and slang terms about the lives of ‘outlaws’. ‘.
The music video features heavily tattooed members in the background and is cut along with shots of motorcycles.
It begins with a biker getting burned on a Harley Davidson while other patched-up club members record on their phones.
Warning: video contains foul language
The notorious Finks motorcycle club has uploaded a rude rap music video to YouTube days after completing its national race in Victoria.
Jarrad ‘Jaz’ Searby is the rapper in the music video and is seen standing in front of the members of Finks.
Some of the lines include: ‘If you don’t represent our colours, then there’s nothing you can tell us’ and ‘we were made like this, we fight back when we see jacks’.
In another line, he says the bikie gang takes ‘no f***ing c**p’ from the ‘Raptors wearing the badges’, referring to the anti-bikie task force in NSW.
“Get over it before they break your fucking jaw, jack,” Searby says in the next line.
“When we smell the weed, we tell the brothers ‘it happens’.”
‘Be careful who you insult or let’s go to your house.’
Searby is a bikie, convicted felon, and the former head of the defunct Australian chapter of the far-right neo-fascist group The Proud Boys.
The controversial move was established by Canadian political commentator and Vice Media co-founder Gavin McInnes.
Searby previously revealed during secret recordings released by the Nine Network that the Proud Boys were being used as a front to attract young people who were groomed to become neo-Nazis.
Those recruits would then be linked to even more violent Nazi groups, many of which have been classified as terrorist organizations.
Searby is a convicted criminal and former head of the Australian chapter of the far-right group The Proud Boys.
The Finks bikie revealed on secret recordings that The Proud Boys would recruit young men from the Australian suburbs and towns.
Club music comes on the heels of their national run from Wodonga, on the New South Wales/Victoria border, to Finks’ clubhouse in Cranbourne, Melbourne, on Saturday.
Hundreds of outlaw cyclists made the 350km journey across the state.
A group of heavily tattooed associates were seen driving into town and joining the rest of the bikers gathered outside Pie Face in the lead up.
Skull-patterned face masks and leather vests emblazoned with the club’s emblem were popular with the assembled members.
They chatted on their motorcycles before setting off in an orderly formation.
Members of the Finks motorcycle club defiantly took part in their national race in Victoria after police warned them they would be closely watched.
Members of the Finks Motorcycle Club start the 350km journey from Wodonga to Cranbourne on Saturday
Chapter President Kosh Radford, also known as Koshan Rashidi, led the group on the trip.
Police issued a warning that there would be a heavy officer presence watching the bikes.
Motorcycle gangs often organize races to show the strength of the club and can be used as a form of intimidation against rival organizations.
The Finks Motorcycle Club has been attempting to expand its operations, but the chapter suffered a setback in November 2022.
The Finks bikes took off in a neat formation as they began their 350km journey to Cranbourne in Melbourne.
Finks’ associates made an intimidating profile while wearing face masks and heading into town on their Harleys.
The club were looking to establish a presence in Bairnsdale in East Gippsland and established a clubhouse in Lindenow.
The police shut down the operation and it was understood that the gang was seeking to establish itself in other cities in the country.
Finks’ boss, Kosh Radford, was convicted in 2021 after assaulting a man outside Centrefold Lounge, a strip club on King Street.
He was fined $6,000 after he pleaded guilty to the crime.
Radford was then denied entry to Bali while traveling with his family to the Indonesian island in 2017.
Victoria is one of the few states in the country where cyclists can openly display their colors and associate in public without risking jail time.