The Canberra Rebels bikie president has admitted to making expletive-laden threats including stomping someone's head and "I want this c--t dead tonight" towards numerous people after police tapped his phone for about eight months before arresting him.
Ali Hassan Bilal, 50, fronted the ACT Magistrates Court on Friday when he pleaded guilty to five charges relating to using a carriage service to threaten to cause serious harm and to harass or cause offence.
Bilal was arrested last December with police claiming they saw him getting into the driver's seat of a Chrysler 300C sedan that was allegedly bought with the proceeds of crime.
An agreed statement of facts tendered to the court shows the transcripts of Bilal's conversations with others, who spent most of the time trying to pacify him, between January and August in 2021.
During one with another man, he threatened to "punch your f----n head in, c--t" and "I'm gonna stomp your f----n head now".
The man apologised to which Bilal said "you're gonna be sorry when I'm finished".
"You're gonna spend a week in hospital when I'm finished with you," he said.
"Twenty-four hours you've got to get the f--k out of my state otherwise I'm gonna shoot you."
Less than one week later, he called the same man to menace him, as well as his associate.
Six months on, he asked a woman to "get that little c--t to ring me" before telling her he was going to "f--k him, his mother, his father".
"I"m not gonna leave anybody tonight. Watch me," he said.
"The instructions on the phone is I want this c--t dead tonight."
In August, he spoke to another person about a bill.
"Option A is you're gonna leave in one piece or option B, you're not gonna leave at all," Bilal said.
"I'm gonna put you in a f----n hole ... and I don't give a f--k who's listening."
The Wollogorang man initially faced 12 charges, including recklessly threaten to cause harm to a Commonwealth public official.
During his latest court appearance, that charge and four others were withdrawn by prosecutor Hannah Lee.
Ms Lee offered no evidence in relation to two others that magistrate Glenn Theakston then dismissed.
Police also allege Bilal is the Rebels' national sergeant-at-arms and that the Chrysler was owned by another Rebels member, who was charged last year with unrelated offences.
He remains on bail and is scheduled for sentencing on June 22.