Nigerian jailed for sham marriage
A NIGERIAN immigrant who took part in a sham marriage so he could stay in the United Kingdom has been jailed, Derby Telegraph reports.
Samuel James wed a young Portuguese woman who had
been recruited by a sinister “fixer” in a square in Lisbon notorious for
prostitution and drug-taking.
James, 33, admitted that, following the wedding, he never saw his “bride” again.
The UK Border Agency uncovered the scam and fixer
Oscar Prata, who had paid the young woman 2,000 Euros to marry James,
was jailed.
The woman was given a caution, as it was considered she had been targeted by Prata for her vulnerability.
James, who changed his name to Odede, was tracked
down by the agency in March this year when he made an application to
remain in the UK.
He was arrested at his home in Riddings Street, Derby, where he lived with his fiancée and daughter.
At Derby Crown Court, James, who came to the UK
illegally in 2003, was jailed for one year and 10 months and is likely
to be deported at the end of his sentence.
Detective Constable Chris Aldridge, of the UK Border
Agency, said, “This man thought he could abuse the immigration rules and
evade justice by taking part in a sham marriage, moving to a different
part of Derby with a partner and child and adopting a new name.
“As this case shows, we will track down, detain and prosecute those fraudsters who have no right to be in the UK.”
The bogus marriage, set up by Prata, took place at St. John the Divine Church, in Willenhall, Coventry, on June 30, 2009.
Prata, an Angolan-born Portuguese citizen, recruited European women who needed money, such as prostitutes and drug-users.
He found the woman who agreed to marry James in a
square in Lisbon. The Portuguese woman was arrested a few months after
the wedding and told police she never saw James after that day.
Prata was arrested in October 2009 at another church
in Coventry – St Chad’s, Wood End – just before a double wedding was
about to take place.
Prata had been due to marry a Nigerian woman and a Portuguese woman was going to marry a Nigerian man.
At his home, police found documents with details of
people for who he had arranged marriages. Written in a notebook was
James name beside an address in Wilson Street, Derby.
In November 2010, the UK Border Agency received an application for residence from James based on his marriage to an EU citizen.
The application said that the couple lived in Coventry and was apparently signed by both James and his bride.
The UK Border Agency did not grant this application.
Instead, officers sought to track him down, circulating his details on
the Police National Computer.
But James was not found.
But then in March 2012 the Home Office received an
immigration application stating that James had changed his name and was
living in Derby.
This led to his arrest the following month.
When questioned by officers, James admitted that his
marriage to the Portuguese woman was a sham and he had taken part in it
to try to make his stay in the UK legal.
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