Violent Black Thug Escapes Deportation by Claiming to be Gay Moments Before Being Pushed Onto the Plane

Daily Stormer
August 30, 2014

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Home Secretary Theresa May signed Brissett’s deportation order in March 2011.

In our twisted modern world, it is no longer showing remorse that gets you mercy, but admitting the further crime of sodomy instead.

Daily Mail:

A violent father-of-two escaped deportation moments before being put on a plane to Jamaica – by suddenly declaring he was homosexual.

Alvin Brissett, 55, was ordered to be sent back to his Jamaican homeland after building up a long criminal record including thefts, drug possession, and assaults.

Yet at the last moment, while he was in handcuffs in a van at Gatwick airport, he announced that he was gay and claimed he could not be sent to Jamaica because he could face discrimination there.

This claim halted his deportation in its tracks.

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Alvin Brissett claimed that he was gay moments before he due to be deported to Jamaica.

And even though a hearing subsequently ruled it would have been lawful to send him home, as Home Secretary Theresa May wished, he has now won the right to remain.

Two immigration judges have ruled that his human right to a family life is more important than the Government’s wish to protect the public from him. Conservative MP Philip Davies said: ‘This case perfectly shows how the law is an ass. We must be a complete laughing stock.’

Asked about claims that he was not really gay, Brissett told The Sun: ‘I had a right.’

Mrs May spent thousands of pounds of public money to remove Brissett from Britain.

Brissett, of Stratford, East London, was 13 when he came to Britain. He has 18 convictions for theft, three for possession of drugs, and four for assault.

In 1993 he was jailed for seven years for robbery, and ten years ago he received a 12-month sentence for theft and threatening behaviour.

Then, in 2009, after he was jailed for a street attack, the Home Office ordered that he should be sent to Jamaica. Brissett immediately began using human rights laws – and his right to a family life – to contest the deportation, but all his appeals failed. In March 2011, Mrs May signed his deportation order.