This article criticizes the decision of a judge to allow a convicted Jamaican drug dealer to remain in the UK based on his daughter's potential transgender identity. The author argues that the decision prioritizes the alleged needs of the daughter over the safety of the community and the well-being of the children who are exposed to their father's criminal activities.
Of all of the decisions made by our cringingly woke judges, that of allowing a 48-year-old Jamaican drug dealer to stay in this country because his daughter ‘may be trans’ is one of the most outrageous. This is a man who’s been convicted of dealing crack and heroin, who attacked his partner in front of his children and who was jailed for three-and-a-half years in 2021 - his fifth spell in prison since arriving in the UK in 1991.
Quite the role model, isn’t he? Yet Dad, who cannot be named and is known only as ‘GH’, convinced Judge Sarah Pinder that his ‘gender-questioning’ daughter would ‘unduly suffer’ if he was deported – denying him his right to a family life under the European Convention on Human Rights. He had to remain in the UK, you see, as he is the only one his daughter could discuss her gender issues with. She can’t do that with her mum, from whom GH is separated, even though she lives with her. How very convenient for GH that the word of his child should save him from being deported. Is a ‘may-be-trans’ son or daughter the new get-out-of-jail card hardened criminals can now play? Is she on puberty blocker drugs? Is she suffering from a genuine belief she was born in the wrong body? Or is she just having a teenage wobble and cry for attention as so many kids do today? We’re entitled to ask these questions. But the point is, we simply don’t know what’s going on. We have only an unnamed daughter and an anonymous convicted felon’s word for it – both of whose identities are protected under law. Given the complete absence of information - as well as this dangerous criminal’s appalling record - I can’t help wondering whether his daughter’s gender-questioning started before or after the threat of deportation. The Home Office ordered the deportation of drug dealer 'GH' after he was convicted of supplying crack cocaine and heroin and sentenced to 40 months in prison And what makes the whole thing even more astonishing is that Judge Pinder is not the first judge to have ruled GH should be allowed to stay. He arrived in Britain aged 15 in October 1991 and in April 1993 was granted indefinite leave to remain. Between 2007 and 2015, he was jailed for numerous offences. It was after he was convicted of supplying crack cocaine and heroin and sentenced to 40 months in prison that his deportation was ordered by the Home Office. But he appealed against it and Judge C L Taylor found that GH had ‘a genuine and subsisting parental relationship’ with his children, although it was ‘limited’. The judge added: ‘One of the appellant’s children became withdrawn when the appellant went to prison and she continued to struggle even after his release. The same child was experiencing issues with her gender identity, which she had only been able to discuss with her father.’ Jolly good. But surely if he really cared about his family, he’d have made sure he didn’t go to prison and cause his daughter to become withdrawn in the first place? Not that the judge, who refused the deportation order, saw it that way. And then Judge Pinder seconded that decision. Worse, she enabled the career criminal to play on his racial identity, saying that, if he was deported, his mixed-race children would have ‘unmet emotional needs linked not just to the loss of a parent but the loss of the parent that represented half of their cultural identity’. Read MoreEXCLUSIVE Jamaican drug dealer avoids deportation as his 'gender questioning child only speaks to him' She added that this identity was ‘an element of the parental relationship which the child’s mother could not replicate because she is white British’. Crikey, so if the mum had been of Jamaican descent, the argument would fly out of the window - and he’d have been flying back to Jamaica. A social worker for GH, meanwhile, argued his deportation ‘would cause the children emotional harm and potentially negatively impact upon all areas of the children’s development, including key areas of identity, family and social relationships’. Which makes one wonder if these do-gooders – who, let’s be honest, sometimes have a pretty poor record of protecting children as horrific cases like the murder of Sara Sharif and numerous others down the years prove – ever considered the emotional damage done by GH to his children already. What kind of a family life can they have when he’s a domestic abuser? How long before Dad beats the hell out of Mum again? Don’t they even consider the stark-staring obvious? That these poor kids would be far better off without a drug-dealing abuser as a part-time dad? Home Office lawyers understandably asked how GH could ever be a ‘positive influence’ in his children’s lives. And what about the influence he has on other young people - the ones he’s sold crack and heroin to? Don’t they have just as much of a right to a family life which isn’t dominated by addiction and crime? GH should have been deported straight after his first, serious drug-dealing convictio
DRUG DEALER DEPORTATION TRANSGENDER JUDGES FAMILY CRIME UK HUMAN RIGHTS
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