BALI, Indonesia — The private jet was parked on the tarmac at Bali’s international airport, engines ready, flight plan filed for Maputo, Mozambique — a destination known for its coastline, its cashew nuts, and its absence of extradition treaties with Australia.
On board was a 55-year-old passenger carrying a Brazilian passport under the name GAM. He appeared calm, unremarkable, just another wealthy traveler departing the island.
But immigration officers at Ngurah Rai Airport noticed something the passport didn’t show.
The man had no record of ever entering Indonesia.
No arrival stamp. No visa. No legal trace.
By the time investigators unraveled the deception, they had discovered not just a document forgery, but an international fugitive wanted by Interpol for allegedly orchestrating large-scale drug smuggling into Australia.
The Man Behind the Fake Identity
The passenger, now identified as AP, an Australian citizen born in Whyalla, South Australia, was arrested on Saturday, June 6, 2026, as he attempted to flee the island aboard a private charter jet.
According to the Australian Federal Police (AFP), AP is no minor player.
He is allegedly responsible for a series of large-scale illegal narcotics shipments into Australia. For years, authorities say, he evaded law enforcement, moving across borders and allegedly using fraudulently obtained travel documents to stay ahead of investigators.
His plan, Indonesian authorities believe, was to escape beyond the reach of Australian law and continue directing his network from abroad.
A Routine Check That Unraveled Everything
The arrest unfolded not with gunfire or high-speed chases, but with a quiet document inspection at the General Aviation Terminal — the section of Ngurah Rai Airport reserved for private jets, business travelers, and those who can afford to bypass commercial terminals.
Immigration officers were conducting routine departure checks on a CAPA Jet flight scheduled for Denpasar to Maputo. On board were three crew members and four foreign passengers: citizens of Portugal, Italy, and Brazil — including the man using the Brazilian identity GAM.
When the system showed no entry record for GAM, officers delayed the departure.
Then the passengers reboarded without permission. The jet began moving toward the runway.
Immigration coordinated swiftly with airport authorities. The aircraft was ordered back to the VIP terminal. A search followed.
The Brazilian passenger was found hiding in the aircraft’s lavatory.
The Interpol Notice
Further investigation revealed that the Brazilian passport was a sophisticated forgery. The man’s true identity — AP — triggered an immediate alert.
Interpol’s database returned a 100 percent match. According to a red notice issued through Australia’s National Central Bureau in Canberra, AP is a significant figure within a Transnational Serious Organized Crime (TSOC) network. He is also recorded as a senior member of an outlaw motorcycle gang.
The AFP has linked him to multiple large-scale drug smuggling operations targeting Australia. Investigators believe he had been evading law enforcement for years, moving covertly across international borders.
“No Room for Fugitives”
Ngurah Rai Immigration Chief Bugie Kurniawan made the government’s position clear.
“We emphasize that there is no room for fugitives or transnational criminals to use Indonesia as a place of refuge,” he said in an official statement.
The arrest has triggered a coordinated international response. Indonesian immigration authorities are working with the National Police’s narcotics division and international relations unit. Customs officials have searched the aircraft and its cargo. The investigation also involves the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Australian Federal Police.
What Happens Next
The private jet, its crew, and all passengers remain grounded while the investigation continues.
AP has been banned from Indonesia for life — a “cekal” status that permanently bars him from re-entering the country. He will be deported to Australia to face legal proceedings.
For years, investigators say, he managed to stay ahead of the law. He crossed borders. He traveled under false identities. He boarded a private jet bound for a continent far from extradition.
But according to Indonesian authorities, the journey ended before the aircraft ever left Bali.
And it ended because one immigration officer noticed that a passport didn’t quite add up.
What This Means for Bali’s International Community
For the millions of tourists and tens of thousands of expatriates who call Bali home — whether permanently or seasonally — the case is more than a distant crime story.
It is a reminder that Bali is no longer just an island of beaches, yoga retreats, and co-working spaces. It is a major international crossroads, where global mobility, private aviation, and transnational crime increasingly intersect.
The same private jet terminals that serve celebrities, executives, and high-net-worth travelers can also attract those who wish to disappear.
On Saturday night, one fugitive learned that disappearing from Bali is not as easy as it looks — especially when the person checking your passport is paying attention.













































