Rail protestor jailed after £1m delays

14 August 2019, 15:20 | Updated: 14 August 2019, 18:25

Terry Maher

Remember the man who climbed on top of a tunnel close to St Pancras station back in March, that stopped all East Midlands Trains into Beds and Northants, Thameslink and Eurostar services for 13 hours... he's now been jailed.

44 year-old Terry Maher from Camden has now been sentenced to one year behind bars for his action.

His stunt, a protest against Brexit, cost £1m to the railways and has been described as the single most expensive "High-Speed Rail Incident".

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A man who blocked trains between London, Kent and France by climbing on top of a tunnel overlooking railway lines near St Pancras International Station has been jailed.
 
Terry Maher clambered onto the tunnel with a St George’s flag, power banks for his phone, warm clothing and stayed in the extremely hazardous area for 13 hours.
 
He eventually climbed off the tunnel voluntarily after conversations with negotiators.
 
Maher’s actions stopped high speed trains travelling to the south east and France, disrupting thousands of commutes and delaying holidays.
 
On arrest, the 44-year-old, of Cubitt Street in Camden, complained about the police and Brexit.
 
In total, 88 trains had to be cancelled and around 22,000 people were directly affected, delayed, inconvenienced or had to abandon their travel plans.
 
International passengers, who were intending to travel on the Eurostar from St Pancras International, were stranded overnight in London.
 
The cost of the disruption is estimated to be more than £1m.
 
Mr Maher was found guilty of malicious obstruction of the railway and was sentenced to one year in jail at Blackfriars Crown Court on Monday (12th August).
 
Investigating officer Detective Sergeant Dean Percival said:

"This has been described as the single most expensive incident in the history of high-speed railway in Britain.
 
However, not only did it cost the rail industry, it also cost thousands of commuters and holiday-makers their time, significantly delaying their journeys and leaving them stranded at stations desperate for the situation to be resolved.
 
Maher’s selfish actions profoundly impacted the day to day lives of the public; that impact is what he was brought to court to answer for."