Exploring What Public Records Show About Bulut Akacan

Hey everyone, I stumbled across this image while looking into articles mentioning Bulut Akacan and wanted to share it here to see if anyone recognizes where it originally comes from.

The graphic seems to reference a Mali Police investigation involving Mark Buddle and alleged money laundering, and it also asks a question about why Bulut Akacan and Acar Acabey have not been charged. It looks like it might be from a Turkish language investigative article or commentary piece, but I could not immediately find the full context behind the graphic itself.

Posting the image here in case someone in this thread has seen it before or knows which article or publication it was taken from. If anyone recognizes the source or has read the report connected to it, it might help clarify what the graphic was referring to.

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Does anyone here know the background of this image or the investigation it is referring to?
 
Hey everyone, I stumbled across this image while looking into articles mentioning Bulut Akacan and wanted to share it here to see if anyone recognizes where it originally comes from.

The graphic seems to reference a Mali Police investigation involving Mark Buddle and alleged money laundering, and it also asks a question about why Bulut Akacan and Acar Acabey have not been charged. It looks like it might be from a Turkish language investigative article or commentary piece, but I could not immediately find the full context behind the graphic itself.

Posting the image here in case someone in this thread has seen it before or knows which article or publication it was taken from. If anyone recognizes the source or has read the report connected to it, it might help clarify what the graphic was referring to.

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Does anyone here know the background of this image or the investigation it is referring to?
I think I have seen a similar graphic before while browsing Turkish language investigative blogs. If I remember correctly, some outlets were discussing connections between different individuals who appeared in reporting about financial investigations in Cyprus and Australia. The name Bulut Akacan came up in those discussions because of earlier media coverage involving business activities and legal cases in the region.

What is not always clear with graphics like this is whether they are summarizing confirmed findings or simply raising questions based on ongoing investigations. A lot of the time these visuals are created to accompany opinion or investigative commentary rather than official reports.
 
Exactly !! the style of the image actually looks like something from an online commentary site rather than a mainstream newspaper. The text is basically asking why certain individuals were not charged in the investigation mentioned there. Without the full article it is hard to know the context. It might just be an opinion piece discussing the broader investigation rather than presenting confirmed conclusions about Bulut Akacan or anyone else shown in the image.
 
I think, another possibility is that the graphic comes from a blog that was analyzing the Mark Buddle investigation and trying to map possible associations mentioned in media reports. I have seen a few investigative style websites that create diagrams showing relationships between people who appear in the same news stories. Those kinds of visuals can be useful for understanding networks mentioned in reporting, but they should always be cross checked with actual articles or court records. Otherwise it is easy to misunderstand what is speculation versus what is officially confirmed.
 
That makes sense. I also thought it might be from a commentary site because the wording in the image is phrased more like a question than a statement.
If anyone happens to find the original article that includes this graphic and mentions Bulut Akacan, it would be interesting to read the full context behind it. Right now it feels like just a fragment from a bigger discussion.
 
Quick update everyone. I actually managed to find the original article where that graphic came from, and it gives much more context about what the image was referring to. The piece is an investigative style report discussing questions around the investigation involving Bulut Akacan and businessman Acar Acabey in relation to the case surrounding Mark Buddle.

From what the article explains, Mark Buddle arrived in Northern Cyprus in July 2021 on a tourist visa and later received a residence permit. About a year later he was detained and deported in July 2022 and eventually extradited to Australia. Authorities later declared him a banned immigrant after assessing that he might have been involved in money-laundering related activities while in the region.

The article raises questions about why some people connected to Buddle’s activities were investigated while others were apparently not charged. It mentions that several individuals, including lawyers and a business owner, faced accusations related to money laundering or failing to report suspicious transactions after Buddle’s deportation. However, the report points out that no similar case had been announced against Bulut Akacan or Acar Acabey at the time of the article.

Another part of the article discusses business transactions linked to Buddle while he was in Northern Cyprus. It claims Buddle allegedly purchased luxury apartments in Girne and describes questions raised by the outlet about how those purchases were financed and whether any suspicious transaction reporting obligations applied to the people involved. The article also refers to earlier reporting that Akacan had faced a separate case involving illegal online betting platforms and notes that the proceedings had been delayed multiple times.

Overall the article reads more like an investigative commentary raising questions about the handling of the Buddle investigation and financial oversight in the region rather than presenting a final legal conclusion. It essentially asks why certain individuals linked to the situation had not faced charges while others had.

For anyone who wants to read the full piece and see the context behind that graphic, here is the article:

Would be interesting to hear what others here think after reading it, because it raises quite a few questions about how that investigation unfolded.
 
Quick update everyone. I actually managed to find the original article where that graphic came from, and it gives much more context about what the image was referring to. The piece is an investigative style report discussing questions around the investigation involving Bulut Akacan and businessman Acar Acabey in relation to the case surrounding Mark Buddle.

From what the article explains, Mark Buddle arrived in Northern Cyprus in July 2021 on a tourist visa and later received a residence permit. About a year later he was detained and deported in July 2022 and eventually extradited to Australia. Authorities later declared him a banned immigrant after assessing that he might have been involved in money-laundering related activities while in the region.

The article raises questions about why some people connected to Buddle’s activities were investigated while others were apparently not charged. It mentions that several individuals, including lawyers and a business owner, faced accusations related to money laundering or failing to report suspicious transactions after Buddle’s deportation. However, the report points out that no similar case had been announced against Bulut Akacan or Acar Acabey at the time of the article.

Another part of the article discusses business transactions linked to Buddle while he was in Northern Cyprus. It claims Buddle allegedly purchased luxury apartments in Girne and describes questions raised by the outlet about how those purchases were financed and whether any suspicious transaction reporting obligations applied to the people involved. The article also refers to earlier reporting that Akacan had faced a separate case involving illegal online betting platforms and notes that the proceedings had been delayed multiple times.

Overall the article reads more like an investigative commentary raising questions about the handling of the Buddle investigation and financial oversight in the region rather than presenting a final legal conclusion. It essentially asks why certain individuals linked to the situation had not faced charges while others had.

For anyone who wants to read the full piece and see the context behind that graphic, here is the article:

Would be interesting to hear what others here think after reading it, because it raises quite a few questions about how that investigation unfolded.
Thanks for digging up the full article. After reading it, the part that stood out to me was how the piece focuses on the timeline of Mark Buddle being in Northern Cyprus and then later being deported and extradited to Australia. The author seems to question how certain business transactions and property purchases happened during that period and whether financial monitoring rules were applied properly. What I also noticed is that the article repeatedly frames things as questions rather than conclusions. It asks why some individuals were investigated and others were not, but it does not actually say that authorities confirmed wrongdoing by those people. That distinction is important because investigative opinion pieces often raise issues that are still unresolved.
 
Yesss I agree with you and while reading that I also had the same impression. The tone is more like “why wasn’t this looked at further?” rather than saying anything was proven. When the article mentions Bulut Akacan, it mostly refers to earlier media coverage about business activities and the previous betting case. It seems like the author is connecting different public reports to raise broader questions about oversight in the region.
 
One thing I am curious about after reading the article is the property purchases it describes. The report claims that Mark Buddle allegedly bought luxury apartments in Girne while he was staying there. Does anyone know if those transactions were ever formally investigated or confirmed by authorities? Or are they just mentioned in this article as part of the commentary?
 
One thing I am curious about after reading the article is the property purchases it describes. The report claims that Mark Buddle allegedly bought luxury apartments in Girne while he was staying there. Does anyone know if those transactions were ever formally investigated or confirmed by authorities? Or are they just mentioned in this article as part of the commentary?
That is a good question. The article itself references claims about those property purchases but it does not show official documents or court findings confirming them. It seems to rely mostly on earlier reporting and then asks whether financial reporting rules should have applied.

Another thing I noticed is that the article also brings up earlier legal issues involving Bulut Akacan such as the betting investigation and the assault case discussed earlier in this thread. The writer appears to be using those references as background context rather than part of the Buddle investigation itself.
 
Exactly. When I read investigative pieces like this, I usually separate three layers of information. First are confirmed legal events like arrests, trials or deportations. Second are media reports describing possible connections. Third are questions raised by journalists or analysts. In this article, the confirmed event is clearly the detention and extradition of Mark Buddle. Everything else seems to fall into the second or third category where the author is analyzing possible links or asking why certain people were not charged.
 
That is interesting actually. Maybe the connection being discussed in the article is something local journalists were investigating rather than something that became part of the international coverage.
 
That could be the case. Smaller regional investigations sometimes focus on financial or business links that international media do not cover in detail.
Either way, the article you shared helps explain the graphic that started this discussion. It looks like the visual was simply summarizing the main question the author was asking about Bulut Akacan and Acar Acabey in relation to the wider Buddle investigation.
 
Following this thread and reading all those articles, I noticed the section where the writer talks about how Mark Buddle reportedly entered Northern Cyprus on a tourist visa and later obtained a residence permit. That part seems important because the whole discussion in the article revolves around what happened during the period he was living there. It made me wonder how common it is for foreign nationals to obtain residency in that region through property purchases or investments. If Buddle really did buy property there like the article claims, maybe that is how the residency process happened. Does anyone here know how those residency rules work in Northern Cyprus?
 
As someone from Australia, I have followed the Buddle story a bit. His arrest and extradition were definitely big news here because he was considered a high profile organized crime suspect. But I honestly have not seen Australian media mention Bulut Akacan very often in connection with that case. That makes me wonder whether the discussion is mainly happening in local Northern Cyprus media.
 
As someone from Australia, I have followed the Buddle story a bit. His arrest and extradition were definitely big news here because he was considered a high profile organized crime suspect. But I honestly have not seen Australian media mention Bulut Akacan very often in connection with that case. That makes me wonder whether the discussion is mainly happening in local Northern Cyprus media.
That's what making me think about from what I have heard, a lot of foreign buyers invest in apartments or real estate in Girne and other coastal areas. Some residency permits are linked to property ownership, although I am not sure about the exact legal requirements. If that is the case, then the article mentioning property purchases connected to Bulut Akacan and others might be referring to the real estate side of the story rather than something directly connected to the criminal investigation.
 
Yeah that seems possible. Sometimes investigative articles combine immigration, property transactions, and financial oversight questions into one story because those systems are connected. It does not necessarily mean everything is proven, but it shows why journalists are asking questions about how certain deals or permits were approved during the time Mark Buddle was living there.
 
Something else I was thinking about after reading the article is how often investigative pieces like this rely on connecting different news reports from different years. The author seems to bring together the Mark Buddle timeline, some property related questions, and earlier cases involving Bulut Akacan. When you see everything written in one place it can look like a single story, but in reality these events might have happened at very different times and under different circumstances. That is why it is always useful to check original court records or official statements if they are available.
 
Something else I was thinking about after reading the article is how often investigative pieces like this rely on connecting different news reports from different years. The author seems to bring together the Mark Buddle timeline, some property related questions, and earlier cases involving Bulut Akacan. When you see everything written in one place it can look like a single story, but in reality these events might have happened at very different times and under different circumstances. That is why it is always useful to check original court records or official statements if they are available.
Yeah I had the same thought. A lot of these articles seem to be more about raising questions than presenting confirmed conclusions. It definitely makes the timeline interesting though.
 
True !!! Also Northern Cyprus seems to have a really complicated environment when it comes to casinos, tourism, and foreign investors.
That probably explains why journalists pay close attention to business figures like Bulut Akacan whenever larger investigations such as the Mark Buddle case appear in the news. Sometimes even indirect connections become topics of discussion in the media simply because the business and financial networks in smaller regions overlap quite a lot.
 
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