UK: Black Bigamist Jailed for Multiple Sham Weddings

Daily Mail
March 7, 2014

Portuguese national Raquel De Andrade (left) had three sham weddings with men from Nigeria and was about to have a fourth when the registry office received some unexpected guests - border police
‘Portuguese’ national Raquel De Andrade (left) had three sham weddings with men from Nigeria and was about to have a fourth when the registry office received some unexpected guests – border police.

A bogus bride was caught minutes before she could tie the knot with her fourth husband.

Raquel Neto Furtado De Andrade had already married three Nigerians to help give them the right to stay in Britain.

But her attempt to marry again for cash was foiled by suspicious staff at a register office. They tipped off immigration officials about the bigamous 22-year-old, who used the same wedding dress at each ceremony.

Thought to be one of the country’s most prolific sham brides, she is now behind bars serving a two-year sentence.

She will be deported to her native Portugal on her release from prison.

Her scam was exposed at Harrow register office in north London. Checks revealed De Andrade had three ‘husbands’, none of which she had troubled to divorce. The fourth groom, a 32-year-old Nigerian, was arrested with her and has been kicked out of the country.

The groom, a 32-year-old Nigerian national, was arrested and has since been deported
The groom, a Nigerian national, was arrested and has since been deported.

The couple arrived at the register office on October 3 with hardly any family or friends to support them on their supposedly special day.

There were unexpected guests however – in the shape of a team of immigration officers. They pounced as the bogus ceremony was about to get under way.

De Andrade, from Tottenham, north London, was charged with two counts of bigamy, two counts of facilitation and one count of perjury. She admitted the charges in February and was jailed at Harrow Crown Court on Tuesday.

The hunt is still on for her three other husbands so they can be expelled too.

It is estimated that 15,000 of the marriages that take place in England and Wales each year are bogus. In January, an official report concluded the scams exploit a ‘massive loophole’ in border controls.

Non-EU citizens can acquire the right to live in Britain from any EU national staying here.

This provides a ‘golden ticket’ for those wanting to stay in the country, according to immigration inspectors.

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