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You mean he was issued a FPN? If so, it will not be classed as a non-custodial conviction.friend12345 wrote:Hi Guys!!!
I need some help on the following situation:
A friend of mine received a letter from Criminal court for taking U turn where it wasn't allowed while driving a taxi, he is due to apply for ILR in Feb 2014 under 10 years category, is this going to effect his application?
Any comments appreciated.
No, he hasn't got the decision yet, all he got just now is a letter from criminal court, if he plea guilty by post and accept court fine and penalty points, will this effect his application in future as it is dealt by criminal court?D4109125 wrote:You mean he was issued a FPN? If so, it will not be classed as a non-custodial conviction.friend12345 wrote:Hi Guys!!!
I need some help on the following situation:
A friend of mine received a letter from Criminal court for taking U turn where it wasn't allowed while driving a taxi, he is due to apply for ILR in Feb 2014 under 10 years category, is this going to effect his application?
Any comments appreciated.
The issue will be whether any non-custodial sentence is recorded on his criminal record for the purpose of part 9 - general grounds for refusal.friend12345 wrote:No, he hasn't got the decision yet, all he got just now is a letter from criminal court, if he plea guilty by post and accept court fine and penalty points, will this effect his application in future as it is dealt by criminal court?D4109125 wrote:You mean he was issued a FPN? If so, it will not be classed as a non-custodial conviction.friend12345 wrote:Hi Guys!!!
I need some help on the following situation:
A friend of mine received a letter from Criminal court for taking U turn where it wasn't allowed while driving a taxi, he is due to apply for ILR in Feb 2014 under 10 years category, is this going to effect his application?
Any comments appreciated.
Thanks
This is not the important factor as I said previously what matters is if the non-custodial conviction is recorded on the ops criminal record and for traffic offences they often do not. As a result the applicant would not be refused under part 9 - 322(1C)(iv).Ayyubi72 wrote:Your friend has been issued summons to appear in court.
He must fill up the forms sent by the court and return them before the date mentioned in the summons.
He can either plead guilty or not guilty. Whether he pleads guilty or not guilty, he will have the option to appear in the court in person alone, or send a solicitor or attend with a solicitor.
If he wants he can plead guilty or not guilty by writing to the court, or ask a solicitor to write to the court and not appear in person. Pleading by post is as same as appearing in person for all practical purposes.
If he pleads guilty that means he is admitting to the court that he has committed the offence. On the hearing date, magistrate/judge will formally pronounce him guilty. No doubt he will be given a fine with the guilty verdict.
As per Part 9 322 (1C) (iv), your friend will have to wait for 24 months before his ILR application will be successful.
If your friend decides to plead NOT GUILTY, then a new trial date will be sent by court. On this date, your friend will have to convince the court that he is NOT GUILTY of the offence. He can convince the court by appearing in person alone, or by going with a solicitor, or just by writing to the court.
After hearing the allegations and the the arguments against the allegations, court will either pronounce a GUILTY or NOT GUILTY verdict. If court pronounces a NOT GUILTY verdict then your friend can walk off, and just forget about the matter as if nothing ever happened. Needless to say this will have no effect on his ILR application.
If the court pronounces the GUILTY verdict then for sure he will be sentenced. Keep in mind, sentence does not necessarily mean prison. A fine is a sentence too. It is a non-custodial sentence, but still a sentence.
In this scenario, As per Part 9 322 (1C) (iv), your friend will have to wait for 24 months before his ILR application will be successful.
Hope I have covered everything.
Amber, with due respect may I say you have no clue what you are talking about. A conviction is a conviction. I have explained at length before that traffic convictions are recorded by DVLA.D4109125 wrote:This is not the important factor as I said previously what matters is if the non-custodial conviction is recorded on the ops criminal record and for traffic offences they often do not. As a result the applicant would noAyyubi72 wrote:Your friend has been issued summons to appear in court.
He must fill up the forms sent by the court and return them before the date mentioned in the summons.
He can either plead guilty or not guilty. Whether he pleads guilty or not guilty, he will have the option to appear in the court in person alone, or send a solicitor or attend with a solicitor.
If he wants he can plead guilty or not guilty by writing to the court, or ask a solicitor to write to the court and not appear in person. Pleading by post is as same as appearing in person for all practical purposes.
If he pleads guilty that means he is admitting to the court that he has committed the offence. On the hearing date, magistrate/judge will formally pronounce him guilty. No doubt he will be given a fine with the guilty verdict.
As per Part 9 322 (1C) (iv), your friend will have to wait for 24 months before his ILR application will be successful.
If your friend decides to plead NOT GUILTY, then a new trial date will be sent by court. On this date, your friend will have to convince the court that he is NOT GUILTY of the offence. He can convince the court by appearing in person alone, or by going with a solicitor, or just by writing to the court.
After hearing the allegations and the the arguments against the allegations, court will either pronounce a GUILTY or NOT GUILTY verdict. If court pronounces a NOT GUILTY verdict then your friend can walk off, and just forget about the matter as if nothing ever happened. Needless to say this will have no effect on his ILR application.
If the court pronounces the GUILTY verdict then for sure he will be sentenced. Keep in mind, sentence does not necessarily mean prison. A fine is a sentence too. It is a non-custodial sentence, but still a sentence.
In this scenario, As per Part 9 322 (1C) (iv), your friend will have to wait for 24 months before his ILR application will be successful.
Hope I have covered everything.
t be refused under part 9 - 322(1C)(iv).
I'm not sure what that jibberish was all about, however, if you take some time and read other users who have been successful for their ilr applications you will see that when non-custodial convictions are not recorded they appear to have been successful. I said non-custodial not non-criminal the word custodial relates to 'custody' - imprisonment.Ayyubi72 wrote:Amber, with due respect may I say you have no clue what you are talking about. A conviction is a conviction. I have explained at length before that traffic convictions are recorded by DVLA.D4109125 wrote:This is not the important factor as I said previously what matters is if the non-custodial conviction is recorded on the ops criminal record and for traffic offences they often do not. As a result the applicant would noAyyubi72 wrote:Your friend has been issued summons to appear in court.
He must fill up the forms sent by the court and return them before the date mentioned in the summons.
He can either plead guilty or not guilty. Whether he pleads guilty or not guilty, he will have the option to appear in the court in person alone, or send a solicitor or attend with a solicitor.
If he wants he can plead guilty or not guilty by writing to the court, or ask a solicitor to write to the court and not appear in person. Pleading by post is as same as appearing in person for all practical purposes.
If he pleads guilty that means he is admitting to the court that he has committed the offence. On the hearing date, magistrate/judge will formally pronounce him guilty. No doubt he will be given a fine with the guilty verdict.
As per Part 9 322 (1C) (iv), your friend will have to wait for 24 months before his ILR application will be successful.
If your friend decides to plead NOT GUILTY, then a new trial date will be sent by court. On this date, your friend will have to convince the court that he is NOT GUILTY of the offence. He can convince the court by appearing in person alone, or by going with a solicitor, or just by writing to the court.
After hearing the allegations and the the arguments against the allegations, court will either pronounce a GUILTY or NOT GUILTY verdict. If court pronounces a NOT GUILTY verdict then your friend can walk off, and just forget about the matter as if nothing ever happened. Needless to say this will have no effect on his ILR application.
If the court pronounces the GUILTY verdict then for sure he will be sentenced. Keep in mind, sentence does not necessarily mean prison. A fine is a sentence too. It is a non-custodial sentence, but still a sentence.
In this scenario, As per Part 9 322 (1C) (iv), your friend will have to wait for 24 months before his ILR application will be successful.
Hope I have covered everything.
t be refused under part 9 - 322(1C)(iv).
All convictions are criminal convictions. There is nothing known as "civil conviction" or "non-criminal conviction". The word "conviction" can and is only used for criminal proceedings, no matter how trivial the matter is.
When its a court order about a civil matter, its called a "Judgement" or an "order". Like "county court judgement", or "anti social behaviour order" or a "restraining order" or "council tax liability order" etc etc.
I think you'll find some will succeed because the non-custodial conviction is not recorded on their criminal record, thus not a mandatory refusal.Ayyubi72 wrote:errrm, Its not jibberish, if you do not have the knowledge about a subject, that does not make that subject jibberish somehow. It is the actual law. How many actual criminal or civil proceedings have you attended?
Yes, some people's experiences are there that their applications have been successful. But read others experiences, when exactly in the same circumstances their applications have been refused. I will post the links to their actual posts when I get time to fish them out.
Not even all caseworkers have the full knowledge about every field of law. I have told the position according to the word of law. Still some people will sail through because caseworkers don't look deep into every application or do not understand. Some won't.
Nationality is nothing to do with ILR so best to keep them separate.Ayyubi72 wrote:I do not "suspect" anything in this matter, I know and understand the matter in depth and in full.
I have already said, that some will sail through, but some won't.
You know too well, that in a non-custodial sentence will be disregarded for nationality matters only after 3 years, and for ILR it will be disregarded only after 2 years, and these are not my words, these are immigration rules, to which I have pointed out, and you yourselves have pointed out.
Now can you tell me which non-custodial sentences are recorded on the PNC?
Does UKBA say that non-custodial sentences that are recorded on PNC will result in refusal?
Does UKBA say anywhere that non-custodial sentences that are not recorded on PNC will result in a successful application?
Do the rules and guidance mention anywhere about the difference between sentences that are recorded or not recorded?
Do you know that even the non recordable sentences can actually be recorded? Do you know how and why that happens?
Do you know that someone's details can be recorded on PNC even if they have never been taken to court let alone found guilty of any offence?
Anyways, I am not expecting a reply or debate with you. I have said what I had to say. Whatever has to happen to someone will happen, including immigration applicants.
I'm afraid you fail to understand that the interpretation of the paragraph is not clear cut. You can read (iv) as the non-custodial sentence must be recorded on the 'criminal record' and based on other people's experiences that would appear to be how the ukba caseworkers are viewing it too. Now unless you have evidence to the contrary I would think before you type.Ayyubi72 wrote:If you are doing LLM then I suggest you smarten up. I won't name the two universities, but two years ago I took a survey of final year LLB sudents. I asked two questions.
I asked, What is the difference between England, Britain and United Kingdom. Out of 100 students, only two answered correctly. Both the people who answered correctly were from Northern Ireland.
I asked, if someone commits a crime, who charges that person in court? Only 12 students answered correctly.
So there you go, UK unis printing and distributing degrees.
Your problem is, because you are arguing, or you have pre decided the possible outcome of debate, you are just using your tunnel vision to read what you are reading.
(iv) they have, within the 24 months preceding the date of the application, been convicted of or admitted an offence for which they have received a non-custodial sentence or other out of court disposal that is recorded on their criminal record.
the highlighted words are just talking about the out-of-court-disposals only. its not talking about non-custodial sentences.
Non, you are doing LLm, so I will let you do some work. Go on, you can shed some light on what out-of-court-disposal is.
Plus you have contradicted yourselves totally by copying this sub para. Now I won't yet tell you how you have contradicted yourselves. Lets see the depth of your knowledge.
You're not doing a good job at being silentUKBA HUNTER wrote:The both posters feel like graduated from Tier 4 B rated law college who just distracting everyone including silent readers (me).
But still Ayubi theory/logics feels more accurate.
Nope, people's experiences do not matter when interpreting rules. It happens on a regular basis in past that UKBA or other government bodies take wrong decisions. Sometimes these wrong decisions are beneficial to applicants and sometimes they are not. But these wrong decisions, which become people's experiences do not become valid interpretations. In past, many a times UKBA issued ILE to people when all they were supposed to do is issue 2 years spouse visa. This happened in hundreds of cases. That does not mean that somehow the rules were "interpreted" and a precedent set because of experience of these people (applicants).D4109125 wrote:You're not doing a good job at being silentUKBA HUNTER wrote:The both posters feel like graduated from Tier 4 B rated law college who just distracting everyone including silent readers (me).
But still Ayubi theory/logics feels more accurate.
And it's not what feels accurate what counts, it's evidence based on people's experiences what matters when looking at interpretations of rules.
Although we are not arguing, we just have differing opinions, we are not getting anywhere. As the stakes are high, I'll send a request to the HO to ask how one should interpret (iv).paba89 wrote:Guys chill. This forum is for helping others not to argue with each other. If you want to argue just for the sake of argue go to some other forum. I hope no more comments on each other comments.
Relax....