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An Immigration Court judge reversed the Interior Ministry’s decision to deport Felix Grig (31), who was sentenced to nine convictions in Lithuania for 11 crimes committed between 2005 and 2017.
Among the crimes committed by Grigo was the rape of a minor in 2007, for which he spent six years in prison. He was also convicted of unlawful possession of a weapon and aggressive behavior in 2013. His other crimes include theft, fraud, and false testimony.
Grig committed all of these crimes before moving to Britain in November 2018. However, despite the seriousness of his previous crimes, the judge avoided attempts by the Home Office to deport Griga.
The Home Office began the deportation process as soon as Grig arrived in Britain.
An independent psychologist conducted a risk assessment of Grig and found that Grig “poses little risk of violence or serious harm to others.”
The psychologist also stated that “F. Grig does not have an attitude or beliefs that support a child’s sexual treatment or aggressive sexual activity.”
The judge’s decision to block deportation, according to The Sun, goes far beyond the government’s promises to deal with foreign criminals. The Interior Ministry will appeal this.
Andrew Bridgen, a member of parliament in northwest Leicestershire, said he was appalled by the decision.
“This is how you start to think about what a person has to do in general to be deported from Britain.” This is a terrible crime. “The decision to block deportation is appalling for me,” says Andrew Bridgen.
The judge, announcing the decision to block the deportation, said Grigg had come to Britain to start a new life and escape his criminal past.
“Despite the financial difficulties caused by his inability to find employment, he has not committed any crime since his arrival in the UK,” said the judge.
“Protecting British society will always be a priority. Foreign citizens who mention our hospitality in committing crimes should definitely be deported. And since 2010, we have deported more than 53,000 such criminals,” said a representative from the Home Office. .
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