Russian captain ‘did absolutely nothing to avoid’ fatal crash with US oil tanker – Bundlezy

Russian captain ‘did absolutely nothing to avoid’ fatal crash with US oil tanker

TOPSHOT - Smoke rises from the MV Solong cargo ship in the North Sea, off the coast of Withernsea, east of England, on March 11, 2025, after it collided with the MV Stena Immaculate tanker on March 10. Fires were raging on Tuesday after a the MV Solong, a cargo ship laden with toxic materials, crashed into the MV Immaculate, a tanker carrying flammable jet fuel in the North Sea, as questions mounted about how the accident happened. There were also growing fears that any spill from the collision could harm the local environment and coastline, home to seals, porpoises and some protected waders and waterfowl. (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP) (Photo by PAUL ELLIS/AFP via Getty Images)
Smoke rises from the MV Solong cargo ship in the North Sea, off the coast of Withernsea, east of England, on March 11, 2025 (Picture: AFP via Getty)

A Russian captain did ‘absolutely nothing’ to stop his container ship crashing into a US oil tanker – killing one of his crew – despite being on an ‘obvious collision course’ for more than half an hour, a court heard.

Vladimir Motin, 59, was on sole watch duty when his vessel, the container ship Solong, collided into the US oil tanker the Stena Immaculate, causing the death of Mark Angelo Pernia, 38, last March 10.

Motin, from Primorsky, St Petersburg, denies the manslaughter of Mr Pernia, a Filipino national whose body was never recovered.

Prosecutor Tom Little KC told jurors today: ‘Ultimately he would still be alive if it was not for the grossly negligent conduct of the man in the dock, the defendant, and who was the captain.’

Mr Little added: ‘The captain owed him a duty of care to keep him safe.

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‘The defendant, we say, manifestly breached that duty of care, he did so causing the death.

‘The risk of death, we say, was serious and obvious, and the negligence and the level of the negligence was so bad that it was gross.’

Undated handout photo issued by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) of Captain Vladimir Motin, 59, who has gone on trial over the "entirely avoidable" death of one of his crew in a collision with an oil tanker anchored near the Humber Estuary. Captain Motin was on sole watch duty when his vessel, the container ship Solong, collided into the US oil tanker the Stena Immaculate, causing the death of Mark Angelo Pernia, 38, last March 10. Issue date: Tuesday January 13, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Crown Prosecution Service/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Captain Vladimir Motin, 59,who has gone on trial over the ‘entirely avoidable’ death of one of his crew in a collision with an oil tanker (Picture: Crown Prosecution Service/PA Wire)
File photo dated 28/03/25 of the stricken container ship, the Solong, which was involved in a collision with the anchored tanker Stena Immaculate about 12 miles off the coast of East Yorkshire on March 10, in the North Sea, being towed in to the port of Aberdeen. A jury has been sworn in at the Old Bailey for the manslaughter trial of a Russian ship captain accused over the death of a crew member in a crash near the Humber Estuary. Issue date: Tuesday January 13, 2026. PA Photo. Vladimir Motin, 59, was charged after his container ship, Solong, collided with US oil tanker the Stena Immaculate in the North Sea on March 10 last year. The defendant, from Primorsky, St Petersburg, has denied the manslaughter of Mark Angelo Pernia, 38, in the collision off the East Yorkshire coast. Photo credit should read: Michal Wachucik/PA Wire
The stricken container ship, the Solong, which was involved in a collision with the anchored tanker Stena Immaculate (Picture: Michal Wachucik/PA Wire)

Solong, which was 130 metres long and weighed 7,852 gross tonnes, had departed Grangemouth in Scotland at 9.05pm on last March 9 bound for the port of Rotterdam in Holland.

The vessel, with a 14-strong crew, was carrying mainly alcoholic spirits and some hazardous substances, including empty but unclean sodium cyanide containers, the court was told.

The Stena Immaculate was 183.2 metres long and was transporting more than 220,000 barrels of JetA1 high grade aviation fuel from Greece to the UK.

The two vessels crashed just over 12 hours after the Solong set off from Grangemouth.

On the morning of March 10 2025, the Solong was in the North Sea approaching an area where other ships, including the Stena Immaculate, were anchored.

File photo dated 11/03/25 of a tug boat shadowing the Solong container ship as it drifts in the Humber Estuary, off the coast of East Yorkshire after it was involved in a collision with the anchored tanker Stena Immaculate about 12 miles off the coast of East Yorkshire on March 10, in the North Sea. A jury has been sworn in at the Old Bailey for the manslaughter trial of a Russian ship captain accused over the death of a crew member in a crash near the Humber Estuary. Issue date: Tuesday January 13, 2026. PA Photo. Vladimir Motin, 59, was charged after his container ship, Solong, collided with US oil tanker the Stena Immaculate in the North Sea on March 10 last year. The defendant, from Primorsky, St Petersburg, has denied the manslaughter of Mark Angelo Pernia, 38, in the collision off the East Yorkshire coast. Photo credit should read: Danny Lawson/PA Wire
A tug boat shadowing the Solong container ship as it drifts in the Humber Estuary (Picture: Danny Lawson/PA Wire)

The prosecutor said: ‘Despite an obvious collision course, the defendant did not deviate his vessel from its path and the impending catastrophe that lay ahead.

‘The defendant was responsible for navigating the ship, not only because he was the captain but because he was on sole watch duty at the time and ultimately he did nothing, absolutely nothing, to avoid the collision.’

At around 9.47am the front of the Solong collided with the side of the anchored Stena Immaculate, the court heard.

The US registered tanker was carrying large quantities of aviation fuel which leaked out, causing fire to spread across both ships, jurors were told.

Mr Pernia was working at the front of the Solong and died in the collision, although his body has never been found, Mr Little said.

BEST QUALITY AVAILABLE Undated handout photo issued by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) of of Mark Angelo Pernia. Captain Vladimir Motin, 59, has gone on trial over the "entirely avoidable" death of one of his crew in a collision with an oil tanker anchored near the Humber Estuary. Captain Motin was on sole watch duty when his vessel, the container ship Solong, collided into the US oil tanker the Stena Immaculate, causing the death of Mark Angelo Pernia, 38, last March 10. Issue date: Tuesday January 13, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Crown Prosecution Service/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Mark Angelo Pernia died in the crash last March 10 (Picture: Crown Prosecution Service/PA Wire)

The Solong was on a direct collision course for much longer than a matter of minutes, jurors were told.

The collision course was obvious when the tanker became visible to the naked eye and, before that, on computer equipment available to the defendant, the court heard.

Motin had a ‘constellation of information’ telling him he needed to act but did the opposite and failed to avert the collision, jurors heard.

There were a number of things the ‘highly trained’ captain ‘could and should have done’, Mr Little said.

‘It is this gross breach of duty to the man he killed, and indeed to his own crew, that led inexorably to a death and to him being on trial before you at the Old Bailey,’ the prosecutor said.

Motin has denied manslaughter and the trial continues.

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