A ringleader of the people-smuggling ring responsible for the deaths of 39 migrants closed his eyes in the dock as his victims’ final agonising gasps were heard for the first time in court.
Haulier boss Ronan Hughes (41) of Armagh in Northern Ireland joined seven other defendants at the Old Bailey in London to be sentenced for their role in the “sophisticated long running” operation when ended in tragedy on October 23rd 2019.
The 39 Vietnamese men, women and children had suffocated in sweltering temperatures in a sealed container as they were shipped from Zeebrugge to Purfleet in Essex.
Recordings of some of their final desperate phone messages were played in court.
In one message, a man spoke with ragged breaths as he apologised to his family.
He said: “I can’t breathe.
“I want to come back to my family. Have a good life.”
In the background, a voice could be heard pleading: “Come on everyone. Open up, open up.”
The sound of people moaning and gasping in obvious distress as they rapidly ran out of air was evident in the recording.
The migrants had desperately tried to raise the alarm, and even used a pole to try to punch through the roof of the container, the court has heard.
While the recordings were being played, Hughes sat still in the dock with eyes shut throughout as other defendants hung their heads.
Lorry driver Maurice Robinson (26) of Craigavon in Northern Ireland, had delayed alerting emergency services when he made the grim discovery of the bodies at Purfleet in Essex early on October 23rd 2019.
Instead, he exchanged a flurry of calls with Hughes and fellow ringleader Gheorghe Nica before dumping his burner phone.
Robinson had stopped in Eastern Avenue soon after picking up the trailer at Purfleet docks.
The court heard Hughes had instructed him via Snapchat to “give them air quick don’t let them out” to which Robinson responded with a thumbs up emoji.
On finding the bodies, Robinson rang Hughes who told him to “Open the doors, give them air”, according to his statement to police.
Robinson responded: “I can’t, they’re f****** dead.”
He then telephoned Nica who had shown him the drop-off point near Collingwood Farm earlier.
He told him to “Ring an ambulance” before Hughes ordered him to “get rid” of his burner phone, according to Robinson.
The driver did as he was told and threw the Sim card down the drain and dumped the telephone on the side of the road, the court heard.
In his police interview, Robinson admitted he knew he was smuggling migrants and claimed he had stopped in Eastern Avenue because “I wanted to make sure the people inside were comfortable”.
At no stage did Robinson tell police about the real reason – Hughes’ Snapchat message.
A total of seven smuggling trips were identified between May 2018 and October 23rd 2019.
Prosecutor Jonathan Polnay said: “These defendants were party to a sophisticated, long- running and profitable conspiracy to smuggle (mainly) Vietnamese migrants to the United Kingdom, in the back of lorries, in a deliberate and intentional breach of border control.”
The prosecution could point to seven specific events of people smuggling, but Mr Polnay added: “It is submitted there is an irresistible inference that there were more events than those that were fortuitously detected.”
Migrants would board lorries at a remote location on the continent to be transported to Britain where they would be picked up by a fleet of smaller vehicles for transfer to a safe house until payment was received.
The fee was between £10,000 (€11,086) and £13,000, for the ‘VIP route’ in which the driver was aware of the presence of smuggled migrants inside the trailer attached to his lorry.
Robinson, who admitted involvement in two smuggling trips before the deaths, told police that he was got £1,500 per migrant he successfully smuggled, and thought he had been paid £25,000.
Robinson and Hughes had pleaded guilty to the manslaughters and people-smuggling plot while Nica (43) of Basildon in England, and the “man on the continent”, lorry driver Eamonn Harrison (24) from Co Down in Northern Ireland, were convicted following a trial at the Old Bailey.
The maximum sentence for people-smuggling is 14 years in prison, with manslaughter carrying a possible life sentence.
The defendants, who are in custody, will be sentenced over three days by Mr Justice Sweeney at the Old Bailey.