Nikos Mallios was handed a four-year prison sentence for health and safety breaches which led to the deaths of two British teens
The father of a schoolgirl who died in a Greek parasailing tragedy today (March 27) welcomed the “first steps to justice” after the boat operator was jailed.
Tony Hayes called it a “positive step in the right direction” after watersports boss Nikos Mallios, 57, was convicted of failings that led to the death of his daughter Jessica, 15, and Mikey Connelly, 13, the Mirror reported.
The pair died in October 2020 after Mallios took them out to sea in his speedboat despite an incoming storm. A three-member panel at the Misdemeanour Court of Rhodes was told the rope tethering them to Mr Mallios’ speedboat “detached”.
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The boat pursued the parasail before it drifted into the water where eyewitnesses hoped they may be able to rescue the teens from the sea. But a “gust of wind” caught it and sent Jessica, Mikey and James crashing into rocks near Lindos, Rhodes.
Mallios was found guilty today of breaching health and safety laws over the tragedy and sentenced to four years in prison. He was temporarily released after indicating he would appeal.
In October he will face two more serious charges – manslaughter by serial negligence and grievous bodily harm by serial negligence – when he appears at a higher court in Kos.
But Tony, 43, welcomed the first conviction, saying: “It’s the first step on the journey to justice. Its a positive step in the right direction, one that Jess and Mikey will look down on and be proud.
“I am happy that a long sentence was given. However, the fight will continue and the next step is to take this to the higher court and make that sentence even longer.
“But doesn’t take away the loss. It doesn’t change the fact that Jess is not here. It doesn’t change the fact that Mikey is not here. It doesn’t change the fact that our lives have been ruined.
“We still have some distance to go. Even though the outcome moves us forward, it still doesn’t take away the emptiness that remains from the loss.”
Mallios took the stand as he finally issued an apology for the tragedy, saying: “I want to say sorry to the families.” But he denied any wrongdoing and tried to justify breaking rules forbidding triple-seat parasailing and taking kids under 14.
He also denied breaching guidelines by operating in bad weather and going outside of a designated watersports area.
But today the Greek justice system dismissed his denials and handed him a “significant sentence”. Tony, from Corby, Northants, said: “I look at [Mallios] and I don’t think he went out of his way to do this. He has had his life devastated as well.
“However he continues to defend some of his actions that day. I understand he feels bad and guilty but, for me, the apology would mean more if he just admitted he made a mistake. If he admitted he did something wrong.”
Tony went to the Greek island in 2020 with his wife Kayleigh, 39, for his father-in-law Phil’s surprise 65th birthday. The couple were on holiday with Kayleigh’s brother Phillip Connelly and wife Sharon – parents of James and Mikey. In the days before the accident, Jessica, Mikey and James played games and watched bands in the hotel.
On October 28 they booked on Mr Mallios’ boat in Lardos Bay after seeing the rides on a board in the hotel. The family said goodbye at 12.30pm on the beach outside the hotel, but never saw them again.
Rhodes Courthouse heard the rope “detached” and Mr Mallios began pursuing the parasail as “black clouds and dark skies” blew in. An eyewitnesses on the boat – who had been taken up in the air just moments earlier – said she was “relieved” when the parasail carrying the three teens started “drifting down and landed in the water”.
But she broke down in tears as she told the court that a “gust of wind caught the parasail”. She told the court: “We were speeding towards the children, for about two or three minutes. It had started drifting down and it landed in the water. We were relieved and thought we would be able to pull them aboard. But then a gust of wind caught the parasail and dragged it back up.”
Jessica, Mikey and James eventually crashed into the rocks at Cape Ginas, around 5km from where they left the shore. The British holidaymaker also gave evidence to say they were told they could go on an excursion but “we had to go immediately”.
She told the court: “They said we could go but we had to go immediately because a storm was coming and if we wanted to go then we had to go right now.” Other witnesses claimed they were in the water when a “terrible” storm blew in and caused the water to become “pretty choppy”.
Another witness told how his three children – aged just 12, nine, and seven – had been taken on a parasailing trip in the days leading up to the tragedy. He said he had repeatedly been told “it was the close of the season and storm was coming”. He told the court: “So if we wanted to do any watersports you needed to do it soon because it was about to close.”
Despite being at the centre of a criminal probe, Mallios was free to continue operating from the same spot where he picked up Jessica, Mikey and James. In 2022 the Mirror revealed he was taking boatload after boatload of thrillseekers out to sea on 75 Euro jaunts.

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