The moment a migrant was loaded into a tanker by French people smuggling gang that got 1,000 people into UK illegally before being raided by police

  • Gang - called the Pierrefitte connection - made 3million euros smuggling people 
  • Police have watched them for the past 12 months in a surveillance operation
  • Earlier this month, French police arrested seven members of the gang  

This is the moment a migrant was loaded into a tanker by a French people smuggling gang that trafficked 1,000 people into the UK before being raided by police. 

The Pierrefitte connection - as the gang is known - made up to 3 million euros loading people into trucks bound for Britain.

For the last 12 months police have watched the group closely, including bugging a bar in the Paris suburbs where members of the smuggling gang allegedly met to discuss their plans.

The investigation came to a head in a series of raids earlier this month with seven people arrested, a French police chief told the PA news agency. 

Undated Handout photo issued by The Central Office for the Suppression of Irregular Immigration and the Employment of Untitled Foreigners (OCRIEST), part of French Border Police, of an individual believed to be a smuggler loading a migrant in a lorry at night at a highway service area

Undated Handout photo issued by The Central Office for the Suppression of Irregular Immigration and the Employment of Untitled Foreigners (OCRIEST), part of French Border Police, of an individual believed to be a smuggler loading a migrant in a lorry at night at a highway service area

Undated handout photograph from French law enforcement shows an individual believed to be a smuggler loading a migrant in a lorry at night at a highway service area

Undated handout photograph from French law enforcement shows an individual believed to be a smuggler loading a migrant in a lorry at night at a highway service area

The crime group smuggled migrants living in Paris or nearby out to the highway where they were loaded onto trucks in the south east of the capital.

The gang's method reflects a shift of smugglers starting journeys farther and farther from the border in the belief that vehicles are less likely to be searched, Supt Jean Arvieu told PA.

He said he has seen evidence of migrants boarding trucks from as far away as Bordeaux - more than 500 miles from Calais.

Mr Arvieu is deputy chief of The Central Office for the Suppression of Irregular Immigration and the Employment of Untitled Foreigners (OCRIEST), part of French Border Police.

OCRIEST work includes targeting criminals trying to smuggle people into Britain, whether by road or on small boats.

Lorries queuing for the Eurotunnel in Folkestone, Kent in September this year

Lorries queuing for the Eurotunnel in Folkestone, Kent in September this year 

Speaking to PA about the investigation into the Pierrefitte connection, he said: 'They were operating at night.

'During one year of investigation we could count about 500 to 1,000 passages or attempts to cross the Channel.'

Those being smuggled had to pay 3,000 euros for a place aboard a truck and the crime gang is thought to have made between 1.5 million and 3 million euros from the operation.

Officers refer to the group as the Pierrefitte connection - a reference to its links to the northern Parisian suburb Pierrefitte-sur-Seine.

The migrants would have been living in squats in the French capital or the surrounding area and were mostly men aged between 20 and 35, Mr Arvieu said.

However, he added: 'One night we could see a kid loaded in a truck and sometimes we have families. This is problematic.

'It shows that migrant smuggling by trucks to Great Britain is still a reality.'

With winter approaching and weather conditions getting worse, Mr Arvieu expects numbers of smuggling attempts in trucks to rise as small boat crossings become more dangerous.

Asked whether he thinks Brexit will have an effect on people smuggling via the Channel, Mr Arvieu said it was difficult to say.

Seven people have been arrested in connection with the Pierrefitte connection and three individuals have been remanded in custody while the investigation continues.

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