It is ironic that Brodie Clark, former chief of the UK Border Agency, should complain about being found guilty without being given the chance to respond ("Head of Border Force hits back at May", The Herald, November 9).
That approach seems to have been the agency’s standard operating practice for several years, with applicants routinely and erroneously denied leave to remain and then left to appeal through the courts at greater public expense than would have been incurred by fair assessments in the first instance.
Biometric checks should be halted
It is ironic that Brodie Clark, former chief of the UK Border Agency, should complain about being found guilty without being given the chance to respond ("Head of Border Force hits back at May", The Herald, November 9).
That approach seems to have been the agency’s standard operating practice for several years, with applicants routinely and erroneously denied leave to remain and then left to appeal through the courts at greater public expense than would have been incurred by fair assessments in the first instance.
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Don't show me this again.