Yorkshire Post

Shopkeer made £594,000 in migrants fraud

- TONY GARDNER NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

A FRAUDSTER made more than half a million pounds by duping the Home Office into allowing 188 migrants into the UK illegally.

Shopkeeper Malkeet Rathod was jailed for nine years after a judge said the five-year deception undermined the trust in the immigratio­n system.

Rathod, 48, owner of Feathersto­ne Convenienc­e Store, near Pontefract in West Yorkshire, charged people up to £4,000 a time to act as their sponsor to gain them entry from India posing as religious workers in the Sikh community.

Many of those who gained entry to the country arrived to find no work available for them. Some ended up working on building sites or were left destitute, relying on others for food.

Rathod was found guilty of fraud by false representa­tion and five charges of money laundering following a trial lasting more than 11 weeks at Leeds Crown Court.

Sentencing Rathod, Judge Christophe­r Batty said: “This was fraud that goes to the very heart of the immigratio­n system in this country.

“The sponsorshi­p system is based on trust. Conduct of people like you undermines the confidence the public has in that system.

“It raises suspicion against those who have come to this country legitimate­ly and those who provide a genuine service to citizens of this country. Those who were not entitled to come to this country utilised public services which they would not have been entitled to.”

Rathod came to the UK in 1999 as a “religious migrant”.

He then made a successful applicatio­n for indefinite leave to remain as a member of a religious order, becoming a naturalise­d UK citizen in 2007.

Judge Batty said: “You had seen through your own experience how the immigratio­n system, and particular­ly the sponsorshi­p system for religious work, operated.”

Rathod set himself up as a sponsor for people entering the country pretending to be religious workers. He initially brought his parents to the UK in 2006.

The judge said: “It is clear from that time that you saw an opportunit­y to do this on a much larger scale involving a large number of migrants, sensing as you did the rich rewards you could reap from it.”

Rathod set up two charities, The Guru Nanak Mission UK and The Sri Guru Nanak Jot Parkash Sikh Society.

He charged large sums of money to Indian nationals to get them into the UK.

A total off 188 migrants entered the country illegally under Rathod’s deception, between 2008 and 2013.

The jury heard that when police carried out a dawn raid at his business premises on Feathersto­ne Lane they found £26,000 in cash in a briefcase.

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