Sunday Express

‘Too easy for Euro fugitives to sneak into this country’

- By Jon Austin CRIME EDITOR

FUGITIVE “gangsters” have been sneaking into Britain and only an urgent review of border controls can stop them, campaigner­s have warned.

A Sunday Express probe found several convicted and suspected top-tier criminals from across eastern Europe, including those wanted in connection with contract killings and drug traffickin­g, trying to evade justice in the UK.

One – Romanian Costel Zlatan, 34 – is wanted in Italy in connection with the Mafia-linked contract murder of Francesco Catalano onvalentin­e’s Day 2019.

Zlatan was arrested in the Bedfordshi­re area in February and refused bail due to his alleged “associatio­n with a criminal group and access to financial means”, according to the court record.

He continues to fight extraditio­n from custody, with a hearing later this month.

Others include Pole Krzysztof Szlachetko, suspected of leading an armed criminal group, who is wanted in Poland to face charges for drug traffickin­g and murder.

Former Met Police DCI Dave Mckelvey said: “There is case after case of people wanted for serious crimes in the top echelons of crime in eastern Europe, and they don’t seem to have any problem getting into the country.

“The Government must review each case to see how they entered and what could have been done to prevent it.”

Alp Mehmet, chairman of Migration Watch UK, said: “It is high time the Government looked closely at the ease with which criminals and fugitives not only enter the country illegally but also, in some cases, get to stay.”

And David Spencer, research director of the Centre for Crime Prevention, said: “The cases are the tip of the iceberg. It is a damning indictment of the failure of the Home Office and the UK Border Agency that such people were able to just walk into this country unchecked. A review seems sensible, although the priority should be removing those who shouldn’t be here. I wouldn’t want it to be used to kick the issue into the long grass.”

The number of extraditio­n cases for England and Wales grew significan­tly from 2004 and again after 2012, when several eastern European countries enjoyed the benefits of free movement from EU membership.

In 2003, 50 extraditio­n cases were heard a year at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court, where one room was occasional­ly used.

In written evidence to a House of Lords consultati­on on extradinet

tion, it was revealed that by the end of 2013 that number had risen to 2,200 cases – only 82 did not originate from the EU. The figure rose to 2,382 in 2015.

However, numbers declined after the 2016 Brexit referendum and figures released by the Ministry of Justice show that by 2018 it was down to 1,573 cases.

Mr Mckelvey believes eastern European crime groups, who entered on false Italian passports, flourished because police did not see human traffickin­g as a priority and major intelligen­ce was ignored. He said: “I was involved in Operation Beregond in 1997/98 and we followed a highworth Romanian female, connected to politician­s, to a restaurant in Surrey where we witnessed her meeting senior British criminals.

“She explained that the new crime era was there for them to purchase properties and she could provide the ‘people’ they could use to take their benefits and put them to whatever ‘work they wished’.

“Intelligen­ce was passed to superiors in the Met who chose to ignore it, as human slavery was not on the radar and we were told to focus on drug dealers.”

He said that around 2005 a major operation involving three undercover Lithuanian police officers had many successes in identifyin­g the growing eastern European crime networks in north-east London. There were several arrests for drug traffickin­g and firearms offences.

However, when it uncovered evidence that eastern European crooks were auctioning women in a café to be sex trafficked, superiors looked the other way and shut down the investigat­ion, branding it too complex.

Mr Mckelvey said: “If these cases were properly acted upon we may not have seen the explosion in eastern European crime groups now faced and in human traffickin­g offences now a priority because it is everywhere.”

A Met Police spokesman did not dispute Mr Mckelvey’s claims.

He said: “Our work tackling modern slavery and human traffickin­g has evolved massively since those times.”

He pointed to cases where scores of suspected modern slavery victims had been safeguarde­d and work had been done with communitie­s from across eastern Europe, including Romania.

The National Crime Agency was approached for a comment but did not respond.

A Home Office spokesman said: “We are committed to keeping dangerous internatio­nal wanted persons and fugitives out of the UK and detaining and removing them if they do cross our borders. We work with our internatio­nal partners to exchange criminal informatio­n and this collaborat­ion has led to the prosecutio­n and extraditio­n of many overseas criminals.”

‘These cases are just the tip of the iceberg. It is a damning indictment of the Home Office’

 ?? ?? WARNING: Former Met Police DCI Dave Mckelvey
WARNING: Former Met Police DCI Dave Mckelvey

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