P&O Ferries’ sackings: criminal and civil investigations start

Insolvency Service tells business secretary of formal proceedings

P&O Ferries’ sackings: criminal and civil investigations start

The Insolvency Service has started formal criminal and civil investigations into the circumstances surrounding the recent mass redundancies made by P&O Ferries.

News of the action came in a letter from Dean Beale, inspector general and chief executive of the Insolvency Service, to Kwasi Kwarteng, the secretary of state for business.

It comes after the ferry operator summarily dismissed almost 800 seafarers on March 17, to replace them with agency workers on lower rates of pay.

The ferry firm boss, Peter Hebblethwaite, later told a committee of MPs that the company knew it was breaking the law by not consulting before the redundancies.

Kwarteng had asked the Insolvency Service to undertake an “urgent and thorough” enquiry into the circumstances surrounding the redundancies, to determine whether the law has been complied with and consider prompt and appropriate action where it has not.

A statement from the bankruptcy watchdog confirmed the investigations, adding: “As these are ongoing investigations, no further comment or information can be provided at this time.”

Transport secretary Grant Shapps tweeted: “The Insolvency Service has reviewed P&O Ferries’ actions and placed it under criminal investigation for its actions. Peter Hebblethwaite stood before MPs and admitted to breaking the law, and his actions must now be scrutinised.”

BREAKING The Insolvency Service has reviewed P&O Ferries’ actions and placed it under criminal investigation for its actions.

Peter Hebblethwaite stood before MPs and admitted to breaking the law, and his actions must now be scrutinised.

— Rt Hon Grant Shapps MP (@grantshapps) April 1, 2022