Oldbury scrap metal recycling plant and bosses fined £2m over death of worker

Stuart Towns died after suffering catastrophic head injuries

This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a small commission on items purchased through this article, but that does not affect our editorial judgement.

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

A company and three of its bosses have been fined more than £2m over the death of a worker who suffered catastrophic head injuries at a scrap metal recycling plant in Oldbury.

Father-of-one Stuart Towns, aged 34, had been working for Alutrade Ltd just three months when the tragedy happened at the Tat Bank Road site on 24 July, 2017.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

CCTV footage shows Mr Towns had walked into an area underneath a hopper, which housed powerful engines used to feed a conveyor belt with scrap metal for processing.

Stuart TownsStuart Towns
Stuart Towns

A gate preventing workers from getting to the area had broken, and the machine should have been shut down and isolated if any kind of maintenance or cleaning work needed to be done on it.

Minutes later, his body was discovered by distraught colleagues. He’d suffered catastrophic head injuries and died at the scene.

Four days earlier, forklift driver Mr Towns had been told not to work so close to the hopper after being spotted by managing director Malcolm George.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He was spotted on CCTV working dangerously close to the machinery 40 minutes before his death, but George, who was stood nearby, took no action.

Malcolm GeorgeMalcolm George
Malcolm George

A major investigation by detectives and the Health & Safety Executive (HSE) saw an entire month’s worth of CCTV analysed, with hundreds of breaches found.

They included: workers jumping up and down on metal in a hopper to clear blockages, a forklift truck driven by Malcolm George being used to lift Mr Towns 18ft into the air to clear a blockage, with no safety rigging, and staff walking on a conveyor belt to clear blockages.

Last month at Wolverhampton Crown Court, Alutrade Ltd admitted corporate manslaughter.

Kevin PughKevin Pugh
Kevin Pugh

They were sentenced at the same court today (25 March).

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

George, 55, of Bromsgrove, director Kevin Pugh, 46, from Sutton Coldfield, and health and safety manager Mark Redfern, 61, of Rowley Regis, were initially charged with

Gross Negligence Manslaughter, but instead pleaded guilty to breaches of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974.

They admitted the charge on the basis that their failings didn’t cause the death, but together the management of the company amounted to corporate manslaughter.

Mark Redfern Mark Redfern
Mark Redfern

Today at Wolverhampton Crown Court, Alutrade Ltd was fined £2m with £105,514 costs.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Malcolm George was fined - £15,000 and ordered to pay costs of £7,109.

Kevin Pugh was fined £5,318 and ordered to pay £3,854 costs.

Mark Redfern was fined £2,635 and the company ordered to pay his costs.

Family tribute

Mr Towns’ family said today (25 March) : “After five years we now feel we can start to focus on the happy times we shared as a family with Stuart.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“We hope that lessons can be learned from the way that Stuart died and hope that no other family goes through what we have been through.

“It’s now time for us to focus on the good memories we have of Stuart.

What did West Midlands Police say?

Senior investigating officer Det Insp Hannah Whitehouse said: “Stuart’s death should never have happened, but sadly it was an incident waiting to happen.

“He and other staff at Alutrade Ltd were operating in a culture where dangerous working practices were regularly overlooked.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“You do not need a detailed understanding of health and safety legislation to know from watching the footage that workers were frequently allowed to risk their lives.

“The company put profit before health and safety and it cost Stuart his life. I hope today’s convictions and hefty fines act as a deterrent to anyone else involved in the industry who hasn’t got their workers’ safety as the top priority.”

A message from the editor:

Thank you for reading. BirminghamWorld is Birmingham’s latest news website, championing everything that is great about our city - reporting on news, lifestyle and sport. Find out more about who’s who in the team, and our editorial values. We want to start a community among our readers, so please follow us on Facebook,Twitter and Instagram, and keep the conversation going.

Related topics:

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.