The Mongols MC
Last month, Detective Inspector Ian Campbell said the Mongols' arrival in Melbourne could further destabilise an already knife-edge outlaw bikie scene.
Mongol Bikies president Frank Dieni and other members in their Port Melbourne clubhouse.
"The Mongols are an international club with a hatred of the Hells Angels,'' he said.
"They (the Hells Angels) will be a bit nervous about it.''
"Why do the Finks need the patch of an international gang?
"If they're a motorcycle club, why do they need to patch over? Why do they need the international support?
"It does destabilise the scene,'' he said.
He said the Mongols were likely to see Australia as a lucrative market and, as former Finks, were expected to continue an allegiance with the Comancheros and Bandidos - both enemies of the Angels.
The Mongols origins date back to 1969 when Hispanic bikies, refused entry to the Hells Angels because of their race, decided to form their own club.
The clubs' rivalry turned deadly during a confrontation in Nevada in 2002 that left three bikies - two Angels and one Mongol - dead.
But the Mongols' new Melbourne chapter president, Frank Dieni, said the public had nothing to fear from the club and it has no beef with any other "one per cent'' club.
Specifically, he said the Mongols violent history overseas - predominantly with the Hells Angels - would not pervade the Australian chapters.
"I don't believe they're (the Hells Angels) going to be nervous about it,'' he said last month.
"They've known us as Finks and they've known us as who we are and there is no difference.
"We're not going to continue on any history that another country has which doesn't really concern us.
"I think if they had any problem they'd be on the phone …..like in the past if they had any problems there'd be phone calls.
"There's nothing that reasonable people can't sort out like that."
Read more on the Mongols in Melbourne here