Pair jailed for looting shipwreck

Pair jailed for looting shipwreck

A pair of shipwreck divers who stripped thousands of pounds worth of metal from a sunken ship have been jailed.

Kent Police said Nigel Ingram, 57, and John Blight, 58, of Winchelsea, East Sussex, looted a Royal Navy vessel – HMS Hermes – at the bottom of the English Channel in 2014.

The protected 19th century cruiser was converted into an aircraft ferry and depot ship ready for the start of the First World War but was sunk by a German submarine in the Dover Strait in October 1914, causing the loss of 44 British lives.

John Blight
John Blight (Kent Constabulary/PA)

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said Ingram, who was convicted of four counts of fraud and one count of money laundering, was jailed for four years, while Blight, who was convicted of two counts of fraud, was jailed for three-and-a-half years.

Police were alerted in early 2015 that a number of historical artefacts were missing from the wreck.

Officers later recovered more than 100 items of unreported wreck at Ingram’s home along with approximately £16,000 in cash.

Items looted from HMS Hermes
Looted items (Kent Constabulary/PA)

The French officers found the men at the Hermes site on September 30 2014, Kent Police said.

Ingram, who had dived from De Bounty, was in the water.

Nigel Ingram
Nigel Ingram (Kent Constabulary/PA)

It showed the ship’s condenser had been removed and that some of the equipment spotted on De Bounty had been left behind, Kent Police said.

Officers also found that Ingram had cashed a cheque from a scrap merchant for £5,029 on October 1 2014.

The French authorities launched a criminal investigation which was later referred to Kent Police.

They also seized a notebook – titled De Bounty, Diver Recovery – from Ingram’s home, which was filled with details of different dives and the items recovered, including the condenser.

De Bounty ship
De Bounty (Kent Constabulary/PA)

None of the items listed were reported to the Receiver of Wreck as they should have been.

After sentencing, investigating officer Pc Anne Aylett, of Kent Police, said: “The HMS Hermes and other shipwrecks of its kind are legally protected for a reason, and that is because they form an important part of the history of this country.

“Nigel Ingram and John Blight have demonstrated a complete disregard for the law by helping themselves to artefacts that should have remained beneath the sea instead of being brought to the surface and sold for scrap metal.”

Items looted from HMS Hermes
Items looted from HMS Hermes (Kent Constabulary/PA)

He said: “All archaeological sites underwater comprise a finite, irreplaceable and fragile resource, vulnerable to damage and destruction through human activity.

“Like nighthawking on land, the illicit removal of objects from underwater archaeological contexts does much more damage beyond just the loss of an item.

“All archaeological sites can give us clues and evidence about past events and it is this history that is disturbed and lost when items are removed.”

Richard Link, of the CPS, said that both men were guilty of fraud but had also caused  irreparable damage to sites of historical importance.

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