People Smuggler Ordered to Pay £3,000 to Bereaved Families of 39 Migrants

People Smuggler Ordered to Pay £3,000 to Bereaved Families of 39 Migrants
Undated family handout photo of (left to right top row) Dinh Dinh Binh, Nguyen Minh Quang, Nguyen Huy Phong, Le Van Ha, Nguyen Van Hiep, Bui Phan Thang, Nguyen Van Hung, Nguyen Huy Hung, Nguyen Tien Dung, Pham Thi Tra My, (left to right second row) Tran Khanh Tho, Nguyen Van Nhan, Vo Ngoc Nam, Vo Van Linh, Nguyen Ba Vu Hung, Vo Nhan Du, Tran Hai Loc, Tran Manh Hung, Nguyen Thi Van, Bui Thi Nhung, (third row left to right) Hoang Van Tiep, Tran Thi Ngoc, Phan Thi Thanh,Tran Thi Tho, Duong Minh Tuan, Pham Thi Ngoc Oanh, Tran Thi Mai Nhung, Le Trong Thanh, Nguyen Ngoc Ha, Hoang Van Hoi, (bottom row left to right) Tran Ngoc Hieu, Cao Tien Dung, Dinh Dinh Thai Quyen, Dang Huu Tuyen, Nguyen Dinh Luong , Cao Huy Thanh, Nguyen Trong Thai, Nguyen Tho Tuan and Nguyen Dinh Tu, the 39 Vietnamese migrants, aged between 15 and 44, that were found dead in the back of a trailer in Essex on Oct. 23, 2019. (Essex Police via PA)
7/23/2021
Updated:
7/23/2021

A member of a people-smuggling gang linked to the deaths of 39 Vietnamese men, women, and children has been ordered to pay the bereaved families £3,000 ($4,126).

The victims, including two 15-year-olds, had hoped for a better life in Britain when they agreed to pay up to £13,000 ($17,888) per head for a “VIP” smuggling service, the Old Bailey had heard.

On October 22, 2019, they were crammed into a lorry container to be shipped from Zeebrugge, Belgium, to Purfleet in Essex, England, in pitch black and sweltering conditions.

The illegal immigrants suffocated en route and were found dead by lorry driver Maurice Robinson who collected the trailer from the docks early the next morning.

In January, four of the people smugglers were jailed for between 13 and 27 years for manslaughter.

Others associated with the lucrative illegal operation received lesser sentences.

Romanian Alexandru-Ovidiu Hanga, 29, of Hobart Road in Essex, was jailed for three years after admitting to conspiring to assist unlawful immigration between May 2018 and October 2019.

He collected a number of illegal immigrants from a drop-off point in Essex and drove them to a safe house in Dulwich, south-east London, a few weeks before the tragedy.

In his sentencing, Justice Sweeney had noted Hanga had shown “genuine remorse” and only got involved because he felt “beholden” to boss Gheorghe Nica, who was “not the sort of person to say ‘no’ to.”

At a confiscation hearing at the Old Bailey on Friday, the court was told Hanga had benefitted from his “criminal lifestyle” to the sum of £83,552 ($115,000).

However, prosecutor Jonathan Polnay said the available amount was just £3,000.

He applied for the money to be confiscated under the Proceeds of Crime Act and that it be used to pay compensation to the victims’ families for funeral expenses and bereavement.

Judge Mark Lucraft QC agreed to the orders and set dates for further hearings later in the year in relation to other defendants.

In January, lorry driver Robinson, 26, of Craigavon, who admitted manslaughter and plotting to smuggle people, was jailed for 13 years and four months.

His boss Ronan Hughes, 41, of Armagh, who also admitted the charges, was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Hughes’s partner in crime Nica, 43, of Basildon, Essex, who was found guilty of the same offences, was handed 27 years behind bars.

Trucker Eamonn Harrison, 24, of County Down, who had collected the victims on the continent, received 18 years’ custody for the manslaughters.

Fellow driver Christopher Kennedy, 24, of County Armagh, was jailed for seven years for his role in the wider people-smuggling operation.

Some of the defendants appeared in court by video link from Belmarsh prison for the confiscation hearing.

Kennedy’s lawyer James Scobie QC said his client was “basically a farm boy working in that field doing some driving.”

In his case, the issue for the court was where his money came from.

Not having receipts, Kennedy would have to give evidence to “say these were legitimate earnings from him working from the age of 17 onwards,” Scobie said.

In the case of Robinson, the court heard there were “exceptional circumstances” to allow confiscation proceedings, despite the length of time that had elapsed.

The Epoch Times contributed to this report.