Thomas Möller

[3] Nielsen awarded the Dräggels "hang-around" status with the Hells Angels in 1990 and "full patch" membership in 1993 after they eliminated the other two gangs.

[7] Möller owned a large estate in South Africa just outside of Cape Town where he escaped the Swedish winters.

[8] The Canadian journalists Julian Sher and William Marsden noted that Möller's lifestyle seemed to exceed what a man living on disability could afford as in 2006 he owned an estate in South Africa; a Ferrari automobile; a Hummer truck; two Harley-Davidson motorcycles; a number of apartments in Malmö and a private museum for his collection of Nazi memorabilia.

[9] The most other most notable Scandinavian Hells Angel leader active in South Africa is Nielsen who owns an estate near the Elephant River game reserve.

In December 2007, the Swedish tax authorities demanded a payment of SEK 4.1 million from Möller due to undeclared income, which according to him was untaxable gambling profits.

[2] In March 2009, Möller's sickness benefit pay, which he had claimed for 10 years due to an alleged back injury, was withdrawn by the Swedish Social Insurance Agency, with demands for repayment to possibly follow.

[11] The journalists Christian Erikson and George Greenwood wrote that they believed that Möller was engaged in tax evasion by moving his assets out of Sweden into the United Kingdom.