Hatton Garden jewellery thieves get 34 years combined
The ageing gang, with a combined age of 448 years, carried out the “sophisticated” and meticulously planned break-in over the Easter weekend last year.
Yesterday, less than a year later, six of the seven robbers were sentenced at Woolwich Crown Court.
Ringleaders John ‘Kenny’ Collins, 75, of Bletsoe Walk, Islington, north London; Daniel Jones, 61, of Park Avenue, Enfield, north London; Terry Perkins, 67, of Heene Road, Enfield, and the group’s oldest member, Brian Reader, 77, of Dartford Road, Dartford, Kent, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit burglary, last September.
Collins, Jones, and Perkins were each given a seven-year prison term.
Jones and Perkins said “Thank you” to the judge as they sat down.
Carl Wood, 59, of Elderbeck Close, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, and William Lincoln, 60, of Winkley Street, Bethnal Green, east London, were found guilty of the same offence, and one count of conspiracy to conceal, convert, or transfer criminal property.
Lincoln was also given a seven-year sentence, and Wood was jailed for six years.
Plumber Hugh Doyle, of Riverside Gardens, Enfield, was found guilty of concealing, converting, or transferring criminal property, between January 1 and May 19 last year.
He was jailed for 21 months, suspended for two years.
Sentencing them, Judge Christopher Kinch QC, said: “The burglary of the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit vault, in April, 2015, has been labelled by many — including some defendants and advocates in this case — as the biggest burglary in English legal history.
“Whether that assertion is capable of proof, I do not know.
“However, it is clear that the burglary at the heart of this case stands in a class of its own, in the scale of the ambition, the detail of the planning, the level of preparation, and the organisation of the team carrying it out, and in terms of the value of the property stolen.”
Reader was also due to be sentenced.
However, after falling ill in Belmarsh prison and suffering a second stroke, he was not well enough to attend court and will, instead, be sentenced later.





