December 24, 2019
All the 25 defendants, accused of trafficking almost 200 kids from
Tandarei [a small town in Ialomita County, Romania] were acquitted. Yesterday,
the Court of Appeal at Targu Mures gave the final, albeit scandalous decision
in this sordid case. Not only that, but the now acquitted culprits aim to sue
the Romanian state at the European Court for Human Rights. Nine years ago, this
case shocked the country as well as the European Union.
The case from Tandarei caught much attention in 2010, after footage and
pictures with the trafficked kids were aired on international news channels.
The investigation targeted 181 gypsy kids in the United Kingdom, who were used
by their handlers to make money for them through stealing and begging. In
England, 120 traffickers were caught and arrested. In contrast, back in Romania,
a portion of those arrested and prosecuted were released just after a couple of
months. Among the crimes involved we count: child trafficking, money
laundering, constituting a criminal enterprise, and illegal possession of
firearms.
The Tandarei case was delayed over and over again for nine years, six of
which by the Harghita Tribunal [where 54 showings took place!], with the clear
aim in mind to allow enough time to pass so that the deeds could be prescribed
[statute of limitations].
Bernie Gravett, the British policeman who worked alongside the Romanian
police on this case, was left perplexed after hearing that Romanian judges
acquitted all 25 culprits, with the motivation that “no crime existed.”
Gravett commented the following, “I’m extremely sad for the victims,
their families, and for the policemen with whom I worked for five years on this
case in Romania. All their efforts were in vain. I can’t tell whether it’s the
fault of the system, the court, or the prosecutors. All I can say is that, in my
opinion, there was proof. I gave proof to the Romanian prosecutors regarding
the exploitation of these 181 children from Tandarei through forced labor here
in Great Britain. More so, I gave them evidence on money laundering, because
all the revenue made in the UK was sent in Romania. The searches done in
Tandarei, in April 2010, found money, gold, stolen goods, expensive cars, an
inexplicable wealth, and many firearms. The searches were filmed. How can the
court say there was no proof? […] I wonder how it’s possible that the British
prosecuted and condemned 120 members of the same gang, while the Romanians
condemned nobody. Europol deemed the group from Tandarei as the biggest human
trafficking group in Europe. The kids were taken in every EU country and were
exploited all the way from the streets of Norway to the Mediterranean coast.
The 25 suspects handled the child trafficking in the whole of Europe. In my
eyes, they were the network’s spear tip, and there was enough evidence for a
sentence. If we had brought and prosecuted them here in Great Britain, they
would have been in jail long ago.”
To those NGOs, politicians, and activists in Romania, who have an
unhealthy love for Romanian magistrates, seeing them as angels, and who oppose
any legislative effort to bring crooked judges to account and answer for their
crimes – to them I say… “F… Y..!”
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