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Alex Mitchell

Outraged police vow to hunt down grandfather's killers

Police believe they have found Chris Baghsarian's remains in a semi-rural area of Sydney. (Aap/AAP PHOTOS)

Police will throw every resource available at finding who mistakenly kidnapped an 85-year-old man after remains believed to be his were found in bushland.

About 11 days after three men stormed his northwest Sydney property and bundled him into a car, grandfather Chris Baghsarian's body was found on Tuesday morning.

Police believe the intended target for the abduction was a relative of underworld-linked Sydney businessman Dimitri Stepanyan, who lived on the same street as the elderly man.

Police at the scene on Sydney's outskirts where human remains were found. (Sarah Wilson/AAP VIDEO)

The recklessness the kidnappers showed in both taking the wrong man and targeting a family member angered authorities, who vow to work around the clock to find those responsible.

“I speak for not only the police but the public in general, that we’re outraged at this happening and the recklessness of these people,” Detective Acting Superintendent Andrew Marks said.

"We will endeavour and use every resource we have to ID those responsible and bring them before the courts."

Police repeatedly told the kidnappers they had the wrong person and publicly urged them to release the elderly man, who relied on daily medication.

Detectives found the remains near a golf club in Pitt Town, a semi-rural area on Sydney's northern outskirts, after members of the public reported seeing a vehicle linked to the investigation in the area a day after Mr Baghsarian disappeared.

Police at the scene where remains were found
Human remains were found near a golf course 11 days after Chris Baghsarian's abduction. (PR IMAGE PHOTO)

Detectives are yet to formally identify the body but suspect it is the octogenarian because of the forensic links to the Dural site, which police previously searched.

Asked last week about organised criminal groups targeting relatives of their rivals, Detective Acting Superintendent Brad Abdy labelled the practice "ridiculously disgusting".

He was speaking to media about an investigation into the shooting of former Canterbury and Wests Tigers winger Matt Utai outside his home in Greenacre, in southwest Sydney, as he was about to drive to work.

The 2004 NRL premiership star was caught in the crossfire of his son Iziah Utai's alleged criminal associations and escalating gang conflict, detectives believe.

Police make arrests overs the shooting of Matt Utai and other associated crimes. (SUPPLIED/NSW POLICE)

“Criminals throughout history have been known to retaliate against other rival gangs (but) this escalation into what appears to be targeting innocent members of particular families, it's ridiculously disgusting offences they're committing,” Act Supt Abdy said.

“These are ordinarily innocent people now being targeted by violent criminal syndicates, and they have no association with the criminality of the people in their particular families."

A man and a teenager have since been charged with shooting with intent to murder over the Matt Utai incident.

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