Suspected kingpin behind illegal migrant Channel crossings vanishes
Suspected kingpin behind 10,000 illegal migrant Channel crossings into Britain vanishes after German court set him free under EU human rights laws
- Suspect named as Dirk P was discovered by police hiding in hayloft at his farm
- He was arrested in March, but has vanished thanks to EU human rights laws
The alleged kingpin suspected of masterminding the illegal boat journeys of 10,000 migrants across the Channel to Britain has been lost by police in Germany.
The suspect, named only as Dirk P in court papers, was discovered by armed police hiding in a hayloft at his farm in Lotte, Germany, as they targeted a gang alleged to be running the migrant flotilla from the French coast.
The 41-year-old was arrested in March — but has vanished thanks to European Union human rights laws.
It emerged this week that the German authorities were forced to free him when a court halted his extradition to Belgium for questioning over human smuggling offences.
Lawyers used a loophole in EU laws to win him freedom at the June hearing, arguing that because Belgian prisons are overcrowded, a ‘persecuted person’ extradited there may face a ‘violation’ of his human rights.
The suspect, named only as Dirk P in court papers, was discovered by armed police hiding in a hayloft at his farm in Lotte, Germany, as they targeted a gang alleged to be running the migrant flotilla from the French coast
The operation, involving agents from Britain’s National Crime Agency and European police forces, discovered the farm was storing more than 50 inflatable boats, outboard engines, 920 lifejackets, three ‘live’ handguns and thousands of euros in cash
Released from remand, Dirk has now disappeared.
‘We have no longer any legal way of monitoring his whereabouts,’ a spokesman for the attorney general’s office covering Lotte in Germany told the Mail this week.
READ MORE: UK’s newest migrant landing spots: How asylum seekers evade capture by using ‘dangerous’ alternative routes across the Channel after crackdown on Calais to Dover passage – as figures show another 600 arrived yesterday
‘He is at large now.’ That means he will be missing from a trial of 21 suspects, including some based in Britain, accused of ‘criminal involvement’ in human trafficking across the Channel, set to begin in Bruges on Monday. The case against him will be heard in his absence.
Belgian authorities say they have lined up ‘leaders, decision-makers and facilitators’ accused of running the massive illegal boat operations during the past two years.
Dirk P, a farmer and maritime equipment salesman, has been described by police as ‘the most important logistician’ of a Channel smuggling ring, which delivered vessels, outboard motors and lifejackets to French beaches for migrant crossings.
He was first quizzed by police during an initial raid at his farm last year, but denied having any involvement in trafficking, saying he was an innocent businessman.
The operation, involving agents from Britain’s National Crime Agency and European police forces, discovered the farm was storing more than 50 inflatable boats, outboard engines, 920 lifejackets, three ‘live’ handguns and thousands of euros in cash.
Jacques Beer, the NCA’s deputy director of operations, said it had found one of the ‘most significant and prolific crime groups involved in supplying small boats and moving migrants across the Channel’.
The gang connected to Dirk P’s farm is believed to have smuggled in 10,000 people over 18 months, charging each up to 5,000 euros (£4,231), and accounting for a quarter of all migrants making the crossing in that time.
Suspected traffickers linked to the property were later arrested in the UK, across Germany and western Europe. Those rounded up included Iranian Hewa Rahimpur, 29, who was found in Britain and extradited to Belgium ahead of the trial.
According to provisional Home Office figures, the average number of migrants per boat last month was the highest on record. Some 3,299 people made the crossing in 63 bigger vessels — an average of 52 people in each
In a further setback to Rishi Sunak’s plan to ‘stop the boats’, we can reveal that new models of bigger vessels, designed to carry even more migrants, are being used by the traffickers
READ MORE: People smuggling gangs are now using boats that can carry up to 100 migrants on brutal Channel crossings, sparking mass drowning fears
Suspicion fell on Dirk P as the gang’s logistical mastermind after the mobile phone messages of those who’d been arrested were forensically examined.
‘We believe this German to be a key figure in this smugglers’ network of mainly Iraqi Kurds,’ police have since said.
Police pictures of the first raid on Dirk P’s farm show boats stamped with the trade name Intex, which traces them to a manufacturer in China.
They are thought to have been bought online and transported to Germany via Turkey.
In a further setback to Rishi Sunak’s plan to ‘stop the boats’, we can reveal that new models of bigger vessels, designed to carry even more migrants, are being used by the traffickers.
Photographs taken by the Mail in the Channel last week show the new craft with larger tubing around the sides and inflated panels under the bow to give them extra strength to carry even more passengers.
According to provisional Home Office figures, the average number of migrants per boat last month was the highest on record.
Some 3,299 people made the crossing in 63 bigger vessels — an average of 52 people in each.
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