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Nigerian who conned women out of £200k allowed to stay in UK | UK | News

A convicted fraudster from Nigeria has been granted permission to stay in the UK, despite being jailed for conning women out of hundreds of thousands of pounds. Emmanuel Jack, 35, targeted lonely women that he met on dating websites where he then persuaded them to give him money which totalled nearly £200,000. 

The criminal was caught and jailed for three years in 2014 after his money-making scheme was exposed. Jack is now allowed to stay in the UK as his family is being treated by the NHS. He was granted British citizenship in 1997, yet had this revoked by the Home Office following his time in prison. Jack was told he would be deported back in November 2022, yet chose to start a legal campaign to remain in the country. 

After facing an Immigration and Asylum tribunal, they decided that deportation would be unduly harsh on his family – his wife and children rely on him to help with their medical issues. 

The fraudster met his British wife after his release from prison, having now been married for six years, the court heard. The judge ruled that his family would be “unlikely” to receive the “bespoke” medical care in Nigeria that they currently receive from the NHS. 

His youngest daughter, 18 months, requires close supervision and care from a health provider following a premature birth. His eldest daughter, who is six, suffers from eyesight problems. 

Jack insisted that “deportation would have an unduly harsh effect on his partner and children and amount to a disproportionate interference with the private life he had established in the United Kingdom”.

The criminal’s priest also came to his defence, claiming that “deportation would have a deleterious effect on family life and would be disastrous”.

The court heard that Jack has a “deep involvement in the care of [his children]” and is a “loving and very hands-on father who plays a key role in their upbringing’”.

The judges said: “Moving to Nigeria would significantly disrupt that care, frustrate ongoing investigations and end the consistency of care that they have each been receiving to date.

“We consider that even if treatment is available, it is considerably harder to get treatment for all three of them in the same location. ”


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