The primary of 5 males accused of being a part of a criminal offense ring behind the theft of greater than 60 Toyota LandCruisers – valued at greater than $8 million – has been denied bail in Brisbane Arrest Courtroom and now faces as much as 14 years in jail.
Sher Hussain Mahasely, a 29-year-old Uber driver and enterprise proprietor, was arrested by Queensland Police Service officers on the afternoon of December 9, 2025.
He appeared earlier than a Justice of the Peace this morning with an utility for bail which, after a roughly 30-minute continuing, was denied.
The QPS alleged Mr Mahasely is a part of a five-man crime syndicate liable for a spike in Toyota thefts in Brisbane, which noticed 74 automobiles – predominantly LandCruiser 300 Collection and RAV4 SUVs – stolen over a three-week interval.
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Police allege the syndicate stole the automobiles utilizing a CAN bus instrument, a technique utilized by thieves in Victoria, the place what seems to be an identical organised crime operation noticed a spike in Toyota thefts earlier this yr.
As described by CarExpert’s Paul Maricthe instrument used to entry the CAN bus (which stands for Controller Space Community) “solely exists to steal automobiles”.
It permits thieves to disable options together with a automobile’s immobiliser, unlock its doorways and begin its engine – all whereas disabling Toyota’s automobile monitoring system.
Toyota Australia has revealed to CarExpert it’s working to fight the issue throughout Australia.
The Brisbane syndicate is accused of focusing on the favored Toyota automobiles with the intention of breaking the automobiles down and promoting the components abroad.
Mr Mahasely was described in courtroom as having ‘not too long ago’ established a car-parts enterprise, Sherwood Automotive Components P/L, within the Brisbane suburb of Rocklea.
The corporate’s Australian Enterprise Quantity (ABN) and Australian Securities and Investments Fee (ASIC) registration are dated August 27, 2025.
Internet search outcomes describe the enterprise as ‘quickly closed’.

Defence lawyer Lewis Hunter, from Brisbane-based Visitor Attorneys, argued Mr Mahasely was not a flight threat, given he was cooperative with police, didn’t personally know any witnesses, and the alleged crimes didn’t contain violence.
Regardless of Mr Hunter’s argument, the Justice of the Peace denied bail for the accused, saying the alleged crimes had been “extremely organised” with a degree of “sophistication”, and given the “depth, quantity and greenback quantity of the crimes”, granting bail would pose an “unacceptable threat”.
Mr Mahasely will face courtroom because the matter proceeds in January 2026.
