Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 26, 2014
Thousands of Non-Whites with a high propensity for rape and violence are not being thrown out of the country because officials are ignoring the tip-offs that they get from the public.
This is probably caused by a large percentage of those officials being non-White themselves, employed to fill diversity quotas and prove that the immigration service is not ‘racist.’
Don’t expect the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration John Vine to come to that conclusion though, because he would then be ‘racist’ for saying so.
Four in 10 illegal immigrant tip offs are not acted on by the Home Office quickly enough, Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration John Vine found. In one case sampled by the inspector, the Home Office was told an illegal immigrant was moving house in three days’ time but staff failed to assess the claim for two weeks.
In another example, an allegation was made concerning the credibility of an appellant in an immigration appeal set to take place in three days – but the case was not looked at for five days and the individual was granted a five-year residence permit.
Mr Vine was inspecting the Intelligence Management System, a Home Office database used for recording and processing allegations concerning immigration or customs offences received from the public, police or Crimestoppers.
In 2013, more than 75,000 allegations were added to this system, which by the end of February 2014 had resulted in over 4,000 arrests and almost 1,000 removals. Nearly three-quarters of all allegations received by the system in the period were made directly by members of the public.
Mr Vine said: ‘In some cases the information contained in the allegation received will be time-critical and a failure to act in a timely manner may render it ineffective. It is therefore important that the Home Office takes steps to ensure that the initial harm assessment is carried out in all cases within the timescales set out in the ministerial target.’
Immigration staff should assess all information received in the IMS within two working days, according to the target set by ministers.