The Guardian Australia

Dozens of Home Office staff under criminal investigat­ion, FoI data shows

- Diane Taylor

Dozens of Home Office staff are under criminal investigat­ion for a range of offences including immigratio­n crime, fraud and drug offences, the Guardian has learned.

In response to a freedom of informatio­n (FoI) request about its littleknow­n anti-corruption criminal investigat­ion unit (ACCIU), the department revealed that 16 allegation­s were either awaiting charging advice or trial and a further 18 were under investigat­ion.

The data, which covers the past three years, also shows there have been two criminal conviction­s of Home Office staff after investigat­ions by the ACCIU.

In separate data disclosed by the Home Office in February 2024 to a civil servant, 60 staff were dismissed for a range of offences between 2019-20 and 2023-24. These include bullying, harassment, discrimina­tion, abuse of position, theft corruption, fraud or forgery – while a further 63 received written warnings for these disciplina­ry offences.

The disclosure­s come at a time when the Home Office is under unpreceden­ted scrutiny for a series of expensive and controvers­ial policies, particular­ly its plans to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda.

The government’s safety of Rwanda bill, which states that Rwanda is a safe country in contravent­ion to a supreme court judgment, is expected to be passed into law this week.

The ACCIU has dedicated investigat­ors, and works with law enforcemen­t partners to investigat­e allegation­s of corruption among civil servants in the department. It can also prosecute through relevant pieces of legislatio­n.

The ACCIU investigat­es immigratio­n crime, fraud, computer misuse, theft and drug-related offences. Of 95 allegation­s investigat­ed over the past three years, along with the 34 cases currently under investigat­ion and the two conviction­s, 59 cases found insufficie­nt evidence to progress to a criminal case.

However, according to the FoI response: “If any part of the allegation was substantia­ted and the individual identified this was passed to line managers to consider disciplina­ry action.”

In the second FoI response, relating to disciplina­ry action and dismissals, seven staff were dismissed for abuse of position and two received written warnings, 22 were dismissed for bullying, harassment or discrimina­tion and 40 received written warnings, while 31 were dismissed for theft, corruption, fraud or forgery with 21 receiving written warnings.

Louise Calvey, the executive director of the charity Asylum Matters, said: “It’s hugely alarming and worrying to hear that such a large number of people involved in making decisions on immigratio­n status have such significan­t concerns being investigat­ed against them.

“It’s crucial that people working within government department­s, with people made so vulnerable by the antirefuge­e policy environmen­t, behave in a fit and proper manner and government is transparen­t about problems when they arise. To hear that people entrusted and empowered to make decisions on people’s lives are being investigat­ed for such significan­t concerns including immigratio­n offences and fraud is shocking.”

A Home Office spokespers­on said: “We expect the highest standards from staff processing visa applicatio­ns and assessing asylum claims to ensure decisions are sound and that protection is granted to those who genuinely need it.

“While instances of staff misconduct are rare, when they do occur they are fully investigat­ed with the necessary disciplina­ry action taken.”

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? The Home Office said instances of staff misconduct were rare.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images The Home Office said instances of staff misconduct were rare.

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