Haulage boss jailed, and disqualified indefinitely

Chris Tindall
July 16, 2021

A deputy traffic commissioner has ordered that the owner of a haulage firm whose vehicle crashed through a central reservation and killed two men should never be allowed to operate HGVs again in the UK.

DTC Mark Hinchliffe said “a message has to go out” to the industry that firms and directors who secretly or illicitly acquire and abuse operator licences will result in “firm and resolute action”.

Haulage boss Michael Holgate was jailed for 15 years for manslaughter and causing death whilst uninsured after one of his drivers lost control of a 30-tonne artic carrying a static caravan on the M62 in April 2018 and collided with a car. The HGV driver, Jack Beston, pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving and was jailed for six years.

Holgate, plus associates Fay Andrew, Graham Holgate and David Radford, appeared before the DTC at a public inquiry in 2019, but publication of the decision was delayed until after the court case.

Hinchliffe said all of the above were now disqualified indefinitely and that if any of them are a director or hold a controlling interest in any company that holds a licence, then that company would be liable for suspension or licence revocation. In addition, Michael, Graham, David and Terence Hebden were disqualified indefinitely from acting as transport managers.

The PI head how Michael Holgate was director, transport manager and driver for several haulage firms in East Yorkshire and had connections with a string of others, including RM Group Hull, RM Leisure Homes and GHD Transport. Vehicles were registered against the licences of other operators – fronting – and there were a large number of serious issues racked up against the operators, including drivers’ hours violations, disregard for safety and maintenance and fabricated invoices.

In his judgment, DTC Hinchliffe said: “Whilst I cannot put the clock back to before 3/4/2018, I can do what I believe is necessary today to protect the public and motorists in the future, and to ensure that law-abiding operators are not unfairly defeated by competitors who disregard the laws protecting drivers and road users, and that are there to ensure a level commercial playing field.

“Great harm has already been done,” he added, “the sort of harm that an effective regulatory system is intended to prevent.”

About the Author

img

Chris Tindall

Chris Tindall started writing for the haulage and logistics industry in 2002 and quickly realised there was enough going on to keep him busy for a very long time. He’s covered a broad range of significant issues, including GPS jamming by criminals, platooning, Brexit and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, the lack of safe and secure lorry parks and he helped secure the release of a lorry driver in a Polish jail due to misuse of the European Arrest Warrant.

Share this article

Vehicle Type
make
model
bodytype
axle
cabtype
Emissions
;