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Post by Red Rackham on Jul 25, 2023 11:48:38 GMT
Lawyers charging £10,000 to make fake asylum claims: Special investigation exposes staff at immigration law firms briefing clients on how to LIE to the authorities to win the right to stay in BritainLawyers are charging thousands of pounds to submit false asylum and human rights claims for illegal immigrants. Staff at solicitors’ firms readily agreed to help an undercover Mail reporter posing as an economic migrant get refugee status. This was despite being told he had no legitimate reason to stay in the UK after arriving on a small boat. VP Lingajothy asked for £10,000 to invent a horrific back story to use in the asylum application. This included claims of sexual torture, beatings, slave labour, false imprisonment and death threats that left him suicidal and compelled to flee to the UK. The legal adviser promised he could get a doctor’s report to back up the story and produced anti-depressants to be given to the Home Office as ‘evidence’ of psychological trauma. www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12333013/Immigration-law-firms-LIE-authorities-win-asylum.htmlThis sort of corruption has been widely suspected for years, well here's the proof. The only question is how widespread is it, I think you would have to be the eternal optimist or of course an outraged lefty, to suggest this sort of crime is not widespread.
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Post by Handyman on Jul 25, 2023 12:11:46 GMT
Yes it has been suspected for years and yes we now have some proof, and yes how widespread is it? the sooner these corrupt Lawyers are struck off the better after a Police Investigations and hopefully charges brought against them ASAP
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Post by Red Rackham on Jul 25, 2023 12:33:01 GMT
The link says the authorities are currently monitoring 40 different solicitors who are suspected of this type of asylum crime, which would indicate it's widespread. If 40 are being monitored you can bet there are more than 40 out there. Perhaps these bent solicitors find it so easy to get away with it is because the establishment are frightened to raise the alarm in case they are accused of racism. I'm reminded of the grooming gang scandal.
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Post by Dan Dare on Jul 25, 2023 12:51:01 GMT
Spare a thought for the 1500 members of the Immigration Law Practitioners Association as well as the 3000-odd members of the Human Rights Lawyers Association.
There are only so many cases to go around and lawyers need to earn a crust or two as well.
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Post by Dan Dare on Jul 25, 2023 13:38:53 GMT
In addition to The ILPA and HRLA members who provide legal services to asylum seekers and immigrants there is a whole other netherworld of immigration advisers who are not members of the legal profession. Since 1999 there has been an Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), a government run and funded agency which is responsible responsible for regulating immigration advisers. It has 60 employees and an annual budget of £6 million. Anyone in the UK (and perhaps elsewhere) can set up as an immigration adviser and can apply to the OISC for certification. There seem to be thousands of them, as listed in the official Register of Regulated Advisers, a list of all organisations providing immigration advice and services. It's interesting to see many advisers (click on the Advisors link for each firm) are themselves former immigrants or offspring of same. From time to time the OISC publishes a list of registered advisers and others who have blotted their copybook and end up in court for peddling illegal or bogus advice. Here is a list of currently open cases: Name / age/ location Johanna Loader / 35 / Milton Keynes Khalick Bhatoo / 70 / Southall Ehsan Danish Ali / 56 / Birmingham Real Christopher D’Cruze / 42 / Huddersfield Thomas Dyer /47 / London Kafumba Fofana /45 / Milton Keynes Syed Gilani / 49 / Birmingham Carlton Harding aka Cal Harding /61 / Surrey Risalat Hussain / 39 / Birmingham Sukhwinder Kang /32 / Reading Shahan Khan Naseer, AKA Sean Khan / 48 / Salford Anetta Owsianko /47 /London Arshiya Siddiqui /43 / Coventry Harrington Thomas / 72 / Croydon Boril Wdowczyk / 55 / London Mohamed Zidi / 54 / Woking Anything immediately jump out?
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Post by Red Rackham on Jul 25, 2023 14:04:23 GMT
In addition to The ILPA and HRLA members who provide legal services to asylum seekers and immigrants there is a whole other netherworld of immigration advisers who are not members of the legal profession. Since 1999 there has been an Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), a government run and funded agency which is responsible responsible for regulating immigration advisers. It has 60 employees and an annual budget of £6 million. Anyone in the UK (and perhaps elsewhere) can set up as an immigration adviser and can apply to the OISC for certification. There seem to be thousands of them, as listed in the official Register of Regulated Advisers, a list of all organisations providing immigration advice and services. It's interesting to see many advisers (click on the Advisors link for each firm) are themselves former immigrants or offspring of same. From time to time the OISC publishes a list of registered advisers and others who have blotted their copybook and end up in court for peddling illegal or bogus advice. Here is a list of currently open cases: Name / age/ location Johanna Loader / 35 / Milton Keynes Khalick Bhatoo / 70 / Southall Ehsan Danish Ali / 56 / Birmingham Real Christopher D’Cruze / 42 / Huddersfield Thomas Dyer /47 / London Kafumba Fofana /45 / Milton Keynes Syed Gilani / 49 / Birmingham Carlton Harding aka Cal Harding /61 / Surrey Risalat Hussain / 39 / Birmingham Sukhwinder Kang /32 / Reading Shahan Khan Naseer, AKA Sean Khan / 48 / Salford Anetta Owsianko /47 /London Arshiya Siddiqui /43 / Coventry Harrington Thomas / 72 / Croydon Boril Wdowczyk / 55 / London Mohamed Zidi / 54 / Woking Anything immediately jump out? "Anything immediately jump out" - Well I suppose that depends on whether your an outraged lefty, or sensible.
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Post by sheepy on Jul 25, 2023 16:59:36 GMT
In addition to The ILPA and HRLA members who provide legal services to asylum seekers and immigrants there is a whole other netherworld of immigration advisers who are not members of the legal profession. Since 1999 there has been an Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), a government run and funded agency which is responsible responsible for regulating immigration advisers. It has 60 employees and an annual budget of £6 million. Anyone in the UK (and perhaps elsewhere) can set up as an immigration adviser and can apply to the OISC for certification. There seem to be thousands of them, as listed in the official Register of Regulated Advisers, a list of all organisations providing immigration advice and services. It's interesting to see many advisers (click on the Advisors link for each firm) are themselves former immigrants or offspring of same. From time to time the OISC publishes a list of registered advisers and others who have blotted their copybook and end up in court for peddling illegal or bogus advice. Here is a list of currently open cases: Name / age/ location Johanna Loader / 35 / Milton Keynes Khalick Bhatoo / 70 / Southall Ehsan Danish Ali / 56 / Birmingham Real Christopher D’Cruze / 42 / Huddersfield Thomas Dyer /47 / London Kafumba Fofana /45 / Milton Keynes Syed Gilani / 49 / Birmingham Carlton Harding aka Cal Harding /61 / Surrey Risalat Hussain / 39 / Birmingham Sukhwinder Kang /32 / Reading Shahan Khan Naseer, AKA Sean Khan / 48 / Salford Anetta Owsianko /47 /London Arshiya Siddiqui /43 / Coventry Harrington Thomas / 72 / Croydon Boril Wdowczyk / 55 / London Mohamed Zidi / 54 / Woking Anything immediately jump out? "Anything immediately jump out" - Well I suppose that depends on whether your an outraged lefty, or sensible. Not really, there are a couple of good old English names, oh wait I think I see what you mean.
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Post by patman post on Jul 25, 2023 17:26:55 GMT
In addition to The ILPA and HRLA members who provide legal services to asylum seekers and immigrants there is a whole other netherworld of immigration advisers who are not members of the legal profession. Since 1999 there has been an Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), a government run and funded agency which is responsible responsible for regulating immigration advisers. It has 60 employees and an annual budget of £6 million. Anyone in the UK (and perhaps elsewhere) can set up as an immigration adviser and can apply to the OISC for certification. There seem to be thousands of them, as listed in the official Register of Regulated Advisers, a list of all organisations providing immigration advice and services. It's interesting to see many advisers (click on the Advisors link for each firm) are themselves former immigrants or offspring of same. From time to time the OISC publishes a list of registered advisers and others who have blotted their copybook and end up in court for peddling illegal or bogus advice. Here is a list of currently open cases: Name / age/ location Johanna Loader / 35 / Milton Keynes Khalick Bhatoo / 70 / Southall Ehsan Danish Ali / 56 / Birmingham Real Christopher D’Cruze / 42 / Huddersfield Thomas Dyer /47 / London Kafumba Fofana /45 / Milton Keynes Syed Gilani / 49 / Birmingham Carlton Harding aka Cal Harding /61 / Surrey Risalat Hussain / 39 / Birmingham Sukhwinder Kang /32 / Reading Shahan Khan Naseer, AKA Sean Khan / 48 / Salford Anetta Owsianko /47 /London Arshiya Siddiqui /43 / Coventry Harrington Thomas / 72 / Croydon Boril Wdowczyk / 55 / London Mohamed Zidi / 54 / Woking Anything immediately jump out? It appears that all but one are charged with providing immigration advice when not qualified to do so.
We have many scams trying to empty our pockets. Despicable though this is, is it any worse than those relieving pensioners of their life savings or conning them out of their pensions...?
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Post by Dan Dare on Jul 26, 2023 9:39:43 GMT
It seems to me a great irony that the immigration advice sector - which used to be the province of charities, the largest of which, the taxpayer-funded Immigration Advisory Services, was run by ex-jailbird and former Tory MP Keith Best - is now fundamentally so chaotic and entropic that a government agency had to be created to police it.
The immigration advice 'industry' is now dominated by one-man/woman shows or small firms with a handful of advisors, the overwhelming majority of which are run by immigrants and the offspring of former immigrants. A glance through the Register of Regulated Advisers will soon confirm this (click on 'Advisers' for each firm).
This is just another little-known branch of the Immigration Industry into which a light is almost never shone. The Industry as a whole is of course now worth billions and with all the spin-offs such as the EDI sector, provides employment for tens if not hundreds of thousands, many if not most of whom are immigrants or former immigrants themselves.
The GBP knows hardly anything about it except for occasional headlines in the Daily Mail.
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Post by Baron von Lotsov on Jul 26, 2023 9:57:25 GMT
In addition to The ILPA and HRLA members who provide legal services to asylum seekers and immigrants there is a whole other netherworld of immigration advisers who are not members of the legal profession. Since 1999 there has been an Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), a government run and funded agency which is responsible responsible for regulating immigration advisers. It has 60 employees and an annual budget of £6 million. Anyone in the UK (and perhaps elsewhere) can set up as an immigration adviser and can apply to the OISC for certification. There seem to be thousands of them, as listed in the official Register of Regulated Advisers, a list of all organisations providing immigration advice and services. It's interesting to see many advisers (click on the Advisors link for each firm) are themselves former immigrants or offspring of same. From time to time the OISC publishes a list of registered advisers and others who have blotted their copybook and end up in court for peddling illegal or bogus advice. Here is a list of currently open cases: Name / age/ location Johanna Loader / 35 / Milton Keynes Khalick Bhatoo / 70 / Southall Ehsan Danish Ali / 56 / Birmingham Real Christopher D’Cruze / 42 / Huddersfield Thomas Dyer /47 / London Kafumba Fofana /45 / Milton Keynes Syed Gilani / 49 / Birmingham Carlton Harding aka Cal Harding /61 / Surrey Risalat Hussain / 39 / Birmingham Sukhwinder Kang /32 / Reading Shahan Khan Naseer, AKA Sean Khan / 48 / Salford Anetta Owsianko /47 /London Arshiya Siddiqui /43 / Coventry Harrington Thomas / 72 / Croydon Boril Wdowczyk / 55 / London Mohamed Zidi / 54 / Woking Anything immediately jump out? Try searching for any criminal solicitor in London or Manchester and you are over 50% likely to be dealing with one of these immigrants with dark skin. Try searching for a criminal solicitor in London or Manchester who is French (the nearest large country in case you were wondering), and the chance is virtually zero. Nearly all of these dark lawyer firms do immigration as one of their key lines of business. As they become judges though then you know you are fully stitched up and taken over.
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Post by Dan Dare on Jul 26, 2023 10:03:54 GMT
In case you missed the point Baron, immigration advisers are rarely lawyers although some of the larger firms may be an offshoot of an existing firm of solicitors.
Immigration advice is a totally separate 'industry' to the legal profession. The latter of course can and do provide immigration advice but they are regulated by their own professional body e.g. the Law Sciety or the Solicitors Regulation Authority.
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Post by wapentake on Jul 26, 2023 10:48:44 GMT
In addition to The ILPA and HRLA members who provide legal services to asylum seekers and immigrants there is a whole other netherworld of immigration advisers who are not members of the legal profession. Since 1999 there has been an Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), a government run and funded agency which is responsible responsible for regulating immigration advisers. It has 60 employees and an annual budget of £6 million. Anyone in the UK (and perhaps elsewhere) can set up as an immigration adviser and can apply to the OISC for certification. There seem to be thousands of them, as listed in the official Register of Regulated Advisers, a list of all organisations providing immigration advice and services. It's interesting to see many advisers (click on the Advisors link for each firm) are themselves former immigrants or offspring of same. From time to time the OISC publishes a list of registered advisers and others who have blotted their copybook and end up in court for peddling illegal or bogus advice. Here is a list of currently open cases: Name / age/ location Johanna Loader / 35 / Milton Keynes Khalick Bhatoo / 70 / Southall Ehsan Danish Ali / 56 / Birmingham Real Christopher D’Cruze / 42 / Huddersfield Thomas Dyer /47 / London Kafumba Fofana /45 / Milton Keynes Syed Gilani / 49 / Birmingham Carlton Harding aka Cal Harding /61 / Surrey Risalat Hussain / 39 / Birmingham Sukhwinder Kang /32 / Reading Shahan Khan Naseer, AKA Sean Khan / 48 / Salford Anetta Owsianko /47 /London Arshiya Siddiqui /43 / Coventry Harrington Thomas / 72 / Croydon Boril Wdowczyk / 55 / London Mohamed Zidi / 54 / Woking Anything immediately jump out? "Anything immediately jump out" - Well I suppose that depends on whether you’re an outraged lefty, or sensible. Last one,Woking lol.
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Post by Baron von Lotsov on Jul 27, 2023 11:43:31 GMT
In case you missed the point Baron, immigration advisers are rarely lawyers although some of the larger firms may be an offshoot of an existing firm of solicitors. Immigration advice is a totally separate 'industry' to the legal profession. The latter of course can and do provide immigration advice but they are regulated by their own professional body e.g. the Law Sciety or the Solicitors Regulation Authority. Try reading some lawyer ads for criminal work and you will nearly always find these high street firms appear to have immigration law as their top earner, as can be seen by the priority it is given in promotional material. You'll nearly always find the group of lawyer firms run by a Hussain or similar. Anyhow it is almost inevitable they will end up as judges. First they do the high-street work cos they are dark skinned and immigrants here illegally would never trust a foreigner. Next you will find the solicitors doing barrister work and then they make it up the greasy poll as first recorder and then judge.
A similar thing happened with Jews. Way back in time they were mainly East London where all the shitty jobs were as it was very industrial. Now they are bankers, hedge fund managers and owners of practically all our local radio stations.They created the Spice Girls and girl power as well.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 7, 2023 7:27:36 GMT
I am not sure what the point of this post is?
The 'immigration' lawyer is doing her job, within the law, one has to assume she will not break it.
By offering her services to 'legalise' 'illegal' immigrants she is helping the Tories with their problem.
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Post by Orac on Aug 7, 2023 9:20:15 GMT
Because some private citizens did the job the authorities should have started two decades ago, suddenly the issue has some attention. The authorities are dragged kicking and screaming by bad PR towards doing their job.
These people are simply brazenly pursuing their interests at the expense of yours because you let them.
Did anyone expect something else?
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