Am I being scammed? (UK visit visa refusal)

Am I being scammed? (UK visit visa refusal)

8/10/2016 12:53:23 PM

The refusal letter itself states that:

In relation to this decision there is no right of appeal or right to administrative review

Therefore you should not attempt administrative review, as it is not available. Any solicitor telling you that is their plan should be dropped immediately, as they are clearly incompetent and incapable of reading plain English at best.

As such, the only approach you could take would be to reapply. If you are doing so, then you should carefully read these official UK government pages regarding what is required and expected of you:

Standard Visitor Visa – note that this is the visa you should be using for a 4 week visit. Family visas are for those looking to stay more than 6 months.

Visitor Guidance – help from the UK govt on applying for a visitor visa.

However, you should note that your refusal states that:

… you are likely to be refused unless the circumstances of your application change.

This implies that the problem with your application (from the point of view of the people deciding to award you a visa) is your personal situation, and not the evidence (or lack thereof) that you have provided. You can apply again with better evidence, but unless your existing evidence is misleading in some way, the ECO thinks you will be refused again.

8/10/2016 2:53:39 PM

The likelihood here is that you are getting scammed. Your narrative fits a well-known profile. In comments you wrote…

Actually My solicitor wants to take administrative review he said
everything is okay we just need to show bank statement with
administrative review where is clearly salary transactions we dont
need to reapply , I am not getting satisfied whatever administrative
review will work or not I need your suggestions because you wrote that
visitor cant take administrative review but my solicitor going to do
this I am confused.

And this is the pattern…

  1. You apply for a Standard Visitor Visa and get refused
  2. A ‘lawyer’ offers to provide representation in an Appeal or an
    Administrative Review. His representation may or may not attract a fee in the opening gambit.
  3. You Google for ‘Administrative Review’ and see that it’s a real
    thing.
  4. You pay because you are very disappointed about the refusal
  5. A few weeks later the lawyer tells you there’s great news! Your case
    was reviewed and will be handed over to the Tribunal for a decision,
    but his representation will attract a fee. You pay.
  6. A few weeks later the lawyer tells you there’s great news! Your case
    was heard at the Tribunal and will be brought before the Upper
    Tribunal, but his representation will attract a fee. You pay.
  7. And so on until the lawyer tells you that a fresh application is
    needed, and his representation will attract a fee, blah blah blah.

Each step is supported by correspondence and paperwork from the ‘Home Office’. But… It’s all fake.

And here’s why…

The Standard Visitor Visa has no rights of appeal or administrative review. Administrative Review has to do with other kinds of visa applications, stuff like work permits and entrepreneur visas. So it’s a scam. Somebody can say, "HEY, the lawyer is innocent, he just doesn’t know how things work"; that’s tantamount to a scam anyway.

Taking a closer look at your refusal notice…

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From the Home Office’s web site (emphasis mine):

1. If you’re outside the UK

You’ll be told in your application refusal letter if you can ask for the decision on your visa application to be reviewed. This is known as an ‘administrative review’.

You can only ask for an administrative review if all of the following apply:

  • you’re outside the UK
  • you applied outside the UK
  • your application was refused on or after 6 April 2015
  • you don’t have a right of appeal against the refusal
  • you didn’t make an application as a visitor or short term student

On the plus side, you may not actually have a refusal, it depends upon where the scam took root.

Best practices advice follows three pathways undertaken simultaneously:

  1. Do not apply again right away

  2. Initiate a "Subject Access Request" to get your file and see what
    the ‘official’ records say about you.

  3. When your SAR comes back, arrange a consultation with a member of the UK Law Society, use the lookup tool on ILPA.

Credit:stackoverflow.com

About me

Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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