Gangs buy haulage firms to steal lorryloads of goods

Criminal gangs are buying up haulage firms to pose as truckers and steal goods by the lorryload, the has learned.

Nov 17, 2025 - 20:12
Gangs buy haulage firms to steal lorryloads of goods
Gangs buy haulage firms to steal lorryloads of goods

Criminal gangs are buying up haulage firms to pose as truckers and steal goods by the lorryload, the  has learned.

We found evidence that a group of haulage companies were purchased using a dead man's details.

One of the haulage firms was then hired as a subcontractor by an unwitting UK transport company. A manufacturer loaded one of the subcontractor's lorries up with goods - which were then never seen again.

Alison - not her real name - runs the Midlands transport firm that was tricked by the fake subcontractors, and says it is "incredible" that "a gang can go in and target a company so blatantly".

This brazen tactic is just one of the ways criminals are targeting haulage firms who deliver retail stock and other supplies all over the country, as freight theft in the UK rose to £111m last year, from £68m in 2023.

Footage obtained by the  shows criminals raiding lorries as they make deliveries, breaking into vehicles while they wait in traffic, cutting locks and breaking into depots, and stealing whole trailers packed with goods

Drivers, who frequently have to stop and sleep overnight in their cabs, have told the  they often wake to find the curtained sides of their lorries slashed by criminals who tried to get at the cargo inside, with shipments of designer clothes, alcohol and electronics among the most common targets.

"You should care because it hits your wallet," says John Redfern, a former security manager for a major supermarket. As more products get stolen, the cost of goods for the consumer will go up over time, he said.

The National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) said freight crime is becoming "more sophisticated, more organised" and said police forces need to work with the industry to respond.

Fraud targeting hauliers - including criminals using bogus haulage companies - is on the rise in the UK, according to the police's National Vehicle Crime Intelligence Service.

"Our industry is under attack," says Richard Smith, managing director of the Road Haulage Association. The industry body hears every day of businesses targeted by "highly organised crime gangs" and police have warned them of "a recent growth" in much more sophisticated methods, he says.

The fraud identified by the BBC appears to follow a pattern previously seen by Europol in mainland Europe, where "legitimate transport companies on the brink of bankruptcy" are bought by organised crime groups who pick up several cargoes "and then vanish".

After Alison's firm was targeted, the officers working on her case told her police were also investigating similar crimes in other parts of the UK.

Alison's haulage firm, which moves millions of pounds around the country each year, subcontracted to a smaller transport company for a job earlier this year. She says she sometimes does this when her lorries are busy or in the wrong place.

"Their insurance was in place, their operators' licence was in place," she says. "It looked great." The lorry arrived at the manufacturing company, a forklift truck loaded it up with DIY products and the lorry drove off, she says.

But unknown to Alison and the manufacturers, the lorry had been using fake number plates. It disappeared with the cargo worth £75,000.

"The first we knew about it was the destination company rang us and said, 'where's our load gone?'" Alison says. She tried to ring the subcontractor, but the number had been disconnected.

A dead man's identity

So who had taken the goods? We followed a twisting trail to try to find out, involving a dead man's identity, a mystery Romanian woman and a £150,000 Lamborghini Urus.

The company Alison hired was called Zus Transport. A month before the theft, it had been sold by its previous owners - there is no suggestion they were involved in any wrongdoing.

The BBC discovered that the takeover was funded by a bank transfer from a company owned by a UK-based Romanian lorry driver named Ionut Calin, who went by his middle name Robert.

We found a network of five transport companies, including Zus Transport, seemingly purchased by Mr Calin this year.

But Mr Calin died in November 2024, we confirmed with Romanian officials. That was months before his bank details had been used to buy several of the companies and his name used to register three of them at Companies House.

We have no reason to believe he was involved in crime, and dozens of people on social media paid tribute to him as a good man who helped others in the industry.

The former owners of several of the transport companies said they had dealt not with Mr Calin, but with a man called "Benny". So who was he?

We found him by investigating the director of Zus Transport named in Companies House records, a Romanian woman. Information about her is scarce, but we found a phone number for her. When we searched for the number in WhatsApp, it showed a profile picture of a young woman, with a different name, in a Lamborghini.

The profile picture helped us identify her as a relative of Mr Calin, and the wife of a man named Benjamin Mustata. Mr Mustata and his wife had posed for a photo when collecting a Lamborghini from a dealership in April, a week after the theft targeting Alison's company.

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