Two people smugglers have been sentenced to a combined five and a half years in prison after they were caught attempting to smuggle five Vietnamese migrants into the UK, concealed beneath a pile of motorbike parts, clothing, and an old mattress in the back of a white van.
Denice Blendell, 62, and Andrew Stainton, 48, were intercepted by Border Force officers at the Eurotunnel terminal in Coquelles, northern France, on 4 March 2022. The van, which was not registered and raised immediate suspicions, was stopped and thoroughly searched just before boarding a train bound for Folkestone.
Upon inspection, officers made the grim discovery: five individuals squeezed into a tiny, airless space beneath heavy items of scrap and debris, concealed in a manner that could have led to serious injury or death had they not been found in time.
A video released by the Home Office shows the dramatic moment one of the migrants was pulled from the makeshift hiding place by officials, visibly shaken and disoriented. All five Vietnamese nationals were handed over to the French authorities and are believed to have received support from immigration services.
Further investigations by the Home Office, working in conjunction with international law enforcement partners, revealed that Blendell and Stainton, both British nationals from Burringham Road in Scunthorpe, were working as part of a wider organised crime network. The pair were expecting to earn £2,000 each for transporting the five migrants illegally into the UK.
Analysis of their travel records revealed multiple trips to France and Belgium in the months leading up to their arrest, raising suspicions about the scale of their involvement in cross-Channel smuggling operations. Financial investigators also discovered that the duo had deposited £14,000 in unexplained cash into their respective bank accounts, believed to be linked to previous smuggling attempts.
On Friday, Hull Crown Court handed down significant custodial sentences. Stainton received a prison term of three years and nine months, while Blendell was jailed for one year and eight months, both for conspiring and acting to facilitate illegal entry into the UK.
Border Security Minister Dame Angela Eagle said: “Blendell and Stainton, like many criminal gangs, were only concerned with lining their pockets. They exploited a desperate group of individuals, showing a complete disregard for their safety by stuffing them under piles of rubbish and motorcycle parts.
“This type of heinous criminality must be stopped, and today’s sentencing sends a strong message that we will not sit by while criminals profit from human misery.”
Jason Jowett, from the Home Office’s Criminal Financial Investigations unit, echoed those sentiments, saying: “As with many of these cases, the migrants were misled into thinking they were coming to the UK for a better life. Instead, they were crammed into a van in appalling conditions while their exploiters cashed in.
“These criminals have no regard for human welfare. Their sole motivation is profit – and one by one, we are determined to put a stop to them.”
The sentencing comes amid ongoing efforts by the UK Government to clamp down on illegal migration and the criminal networks that facilitate it. In recent months, cooperation between British and European agencies has led to several high-profile arrests, and new resources are being invested into disrupting smuggling routes.
While this latest case highlights the continuing challenges posed by organised immigration crime, officials say it also demonstrates the importance of robust border checks and international collaboration in tackling the issue head-on.
As the government presses ahead with new legislation aimed at deterring illegal entry, campaigners continue to call for safe and legal routes for asylum seekers to prevent further exploitation by ruthless people smugglers.