Sky News
A haulage boss jailed over the deaths of 39 Vietnamese migrants who were smuggled into the UK has been ordered to pay their families more than £180,000.
Ronan Hughes, 43, is serving a 20-year sentence for the manslaughter of the victims whose bodies were found in the trailer of a lorry in Essex in 2019.
On Friday at the Old Bailey, Judge Mark Lucraft KC confiscated Hughes' gains from his role in the people-smuggling operation and ordered that the £182,078.90 sum be paid in compensation to the bereaved families of the victims.
The available assets included cash, bank accounts, the value of lorries, including the one in which the victims died, and Hughes' share of a property in Ireland.
The judge said the penalty for defaulting on the order was two years in prison.
Hughes' earlier trial at the Old Bailey heard how 39 bodies were found in the trailer of a lorry after it was transported by ferry from Zeebrugge in Belgium to Purfleet in Essex, early on 23 October 2019.
The victims - men, women and children, aged between 15 and 44 - had suffocated after being sealed inside an airtight unit for nearly 12 hours.
Hughes, of Co Armagh in Northern Ireland, had deployed lorry drivers in the plot, including Maurice Robinson, 28, who discovered his human cargo had already suffocated in transit after picking up the trailer they were in at Purfleet in Essex.
Shortly before Robinson opened the back of the container, Hughes had texted him to "give them air quickly" but "don't let them out".
As part of the investigation, police identified at least six smuggling trips, with migrants paying up to £13,000 for a "VIP" service.
Ronan Hughes, 43, is serving a 20-year sentence for the manslaughter of the victims whose bodies were found in the trailer of a lorry in Essex in 2019.
On Friday at the Old Bailey, Judge Mark Lucraft KC confiscated Hughes' gains from his role in the people-smuggling operation and ordered that the £182,078.90 sum be paid in compensation to the bereaved families of the victims.
The available assets included cash, bank accounts, the value of lorries, including the one in which the victims died, and Hughes' share of a property in Ireland.
The judge said the penalty for defaulting on the order was two years in prison.
Hughes' earlier trial at the Old Bailey heard how 39 bodies were found in the trailer of a lorry after it was transported by ferry from Zeebrugge in Belgium to Purfleet in Essex, early on 23 October 2019.
The victims - men, women and children, aged between 15 and 44 - had suffocated after being sealed inside an airtight unit for nearly 12 hours.
Hughes, of Co Armagh in Northern Ireland, had deployed lorry drivers in the plot, including Maurice Robinson, 28, who discovered his human cargo had already suffocated in transit after picking up the trailer they were in at Purfleet in Essex.
Shortly before Robinson opened the back of the container, Hughes had texted him to "give them air quickly" but "don't let them out".
As part of the investigation, police identified at least six smuggling trips, with migrants paying up to £13,000 for a "VIP" service.