Sex 'groom gang' lawyers criticised

Date published: 07 February 2017


A SENIOR judge has criticised lawyers representing a gang of child sex groomers who are seeking to avoid deportation.

Mr Justice Bernard McCloskey accused them of "frankly shameful" behaviour during a delayed immigration tribunal.

The four men, led by Shabir Ahmed (63), from Oldham. were convicted in 2012 of preying on girls as young as 13 in Rochdale.

The law firms involved declined to comment while the case was ongoing.

Mr Justice McCloskey, president of the Immigration and Asylum Chamber, said the men's barristers and solicitors had failed to submit the necessary papers to the court and had repeatedly asked for adjournments.

He said: "The Upper Tribunal has been treated with sustained and marked disrespect. The conduct of these appeals has been cavalier and unprofessional. The rule of law has been weakened in consequence."

The judge, who is expected to deliver his decision on the men's appeal against deportation this month, has urged government legal officials to mount an investigation into such cases.

The Rochdale grooming gang plied teenagers with drink and drugs before they were "passed around" for sex, the trial was told.

Ahmed was given a 19-year sentence at Liverpool Crown Court in May 2012 for a string of child sex offences, including rape. He was also jailed for 22 years, to run concurrently, in July 2012 for raping another child 30 times over a decade.

Three other men convicted of child sex offences in the same case, Abdul Aziz, Adil Khan and Abdul Rauf, are also appealing against deportation.