Generate a structured brief — facts, issues, held, reasoning, and significance — for this case in seconds. Or browse the verbatim judgment via the source links below.
             The appellant is a citizen of Nigeria. She appeals against a decision of the Secretary of State made on 3 December 2020 to refuse her human rights claim.
             The appellant entered the United Kingdom on 18 August 2004 to join her then partner, Mr Alada, who is now deceased. Using a false identity she was able to obtain British citizenship for herself and her three children.
             On 23 May 2012 she applied for leave to remain outside the Rules, which was granted until 15 November 2014. On 30 July 2014 she was convicted of assault/ill-treatment/ neglect/abandonment of a child/young person and sentenced to a community order, an activity requirement and fined £10. She was granted further leave to remain on 12 November 2014 outside the Rules until 18 February 2018.
             On 19 May 2016 she was convicted of three counts of making false representation to obtain benefit and one count of being concerned with fraudulent activity, with a view to obtaining tax credits, for which she was sentenced to one year and four months' imprisonment.
             On 8 December 2017, she was served with a notice to refuse her human rights claim, which carried with it a grant of appeal. Her appeal to the First-tier Tribunal was dismissed on 30 April 2019. Subsequent to that, she made fresh representations on the basis that she has a family life in the United Kingdom with her partner, Mr GK and with whom she had a child born on 1 October 2019. She also said she continues to have a family life with her three children, who had been taken into care in Leeds.
Auto-extracted from BAILII. Full structured brief in progress — the source links below give you the verbatim judgment in the meantime.
Multiple official and mirror sources — pick whichever loads cleanly on your network.
Common Room
0 comments · About the Common Room →
No comments yet — start the discussion.
Voted-best comments help future students and feed Caselaw's AI study tools.