Woman, 50, caught trying to smuggle people is jailed

A woman has been jailed for attempting to smuggle three people hidden in the boot and foot well of her car into Britain.

Wendy Thomas, 50, was stopped at the UK border controls at the Eurotunnel terminal in Coquelles, France, where officers discovered two women in a holdall and a man lying on the floor in the back covered in a quilt.

Two of the stowaways were unresponsive and were taken to hospital on October 9, 2016.

Adriano Bettoja-Allen was sentenced to five years in prison after admitting two counts of assisting illegal immigration

Wendy Thomas, 50, (left) has been jailed for two years for people smuggling while Adriano Bettoja-Allen (right) was sentenced to five years in prison after admitting two counts of assisting illegal immigration

Officers discovered two women in a holdall and a man lying on the floor in the back covered in a quilt

Officers discovered two women in a holdall and a man lying on the floor in the back covered in a quilt

Thomas, from Cardiff in South Wales, pleaded guilty to one count of assisting illegal immigration and was sentenced to two years and nine months in prison at Blackfriars Crown Court on Thursday. 

The Home Office said Thomas’ co-conspirators Adriano Bettoja-Allen, 37, and his wife Jeanette, 49, were also sentenced for their parts in two separate ‘carefully planned’ attempts to smuggle people into the UK.

Officers launched an investigation after arresting British national Dawood Shahbeik at St Pancras International station when he arrived on the Eurostar from Calais on October 2, 2016.

Shahbeik’s mobile phone contained text messages referring to an individual who had been transported to a house in Newport, South Wales. 

A search of his luggage revealed a damaged Iranian passport and a large amount of cash, a Home Office spokeswoman said.

Thomas was arrested a week after Shahbeik and text messages on both their phones showed they had been in regular contact with Bettoja-Allen, from Newport.

Two of the stowaways were unresponsive and were taken to hospital on October 9, 2016

Two of the stowaways were unresponsive and were taken to hospital on October 9, 2016

The two women were found inside a large black holdall filling the boot of Thomas’ car and covered by pillows and a large soft toy.

The third passenger, a man who later claimed to be an Iranian national, was handed to the French authorities to be removed from the UK control zone. 

He was found hiding underneath two cushions and quilt spread across the car covering the rear foot wells. 

The CFI team discovered Bettoja-Allen and his wife had travelled through Calais on October 2 having earlier met up with Shahbeik in Dunkirk and that Thomas and Bettoja-Allen had travelled in separate vehicles from Folkestone to Coquelles on the same Eurotunnel train on October 8.

Bettoja-Allen returned to the UK alone the next day less than two hours after Thomas had been stopped by Border Force.

Financial checks also uncovered a large cash deposit into Thomas’ bank account in September 2016.

Jeanette Bettoja-Allen, originally from the Philippines, was linked to the Calais incident. 

The 49-year-old was sentenced to 11 months suspended for two years, 150 hours unpaid work, and a curfew after pleading guilty to assisting illegal immigration three days into her trial.

Her husband was sentenced to five years in prison after admitting two counts of assisting illegal immigration.

Shahbeik was dealt with at an earlier hearing and was sentenced to 18 months in prison after admitting one count of assisting illegal immigration.

Two women were found inside this large black holdall in the vehicle

Two women were found inside this large black holdall in the vehicle

David Fairclough, assistant director from Immigration Enforcement’s Criminal and Financial Investigation (CFI) team, said: ‘Adriano Bettoja-Allen was revealed by our investigations to be the common link between what initially appeared to be unconnected incidents.

‘Our investigations showed that far from being opportunistic attempts to undermine the UK’s border controls, the offences had been carefully planned.

‘The fact that two women ended up in hospital demonstrates the dangerous lengths people smugglers will go to.’

Mr Fairclough said the case was a warning for anyone tempted to get involved in people-smuggling.

‘We work closely with Border Force colleagues to rigorously investigate allegations of immigration-related criminality,’ he said.

‘We will catch you, and put you before the courts.’ 



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