Faust Abolore plotted to gain British citizenship by putting 44-year-old
 Anthony Ezekpo’s name on her son’s birth certificate and a subsequent 
passport application.
However, she was caught when photographs of the child’s real father, 
Nigerian national Peter Gentry, were posted on Facebook, showing him 
cradling the boy at a naming ceremony. 
   
Inner London crown court heard that Abolore got a job as a care home 
assistant in 2011 with a bogus Portuguese passport, and had twice been 
turned down for leave to remain in 2013 and 2014.
   
Sentencing Abolore and Ezekpo to 18 months each, Judge Mark Bishop said:
   
"These sort of offences undermine confidence in the system of 
immigration control. You, Abolore, were seeking to cheat your way into 
being allowed to remain in this country. Ezekpo, you agreed to help her 
in making that possible."
   
Abolore, who was living with Mr Gentry in Erith, gave birth at Queen 
Elizabeth Hospital in Woolwich on August 6, 2014. Prosecutor Alex Mills 
said:
   
"Ms Abolore entered an agreement with Mr Ezekpo whereby he would pretend
 to be the father of that child."
The pair went to a register office and signed the birth certificate 
which said Ezekpo was the boy’s father and claimed they lived together 
in Erith.
"There had been a payment of £1,000 which coincided with the visit to 
the register office," said Mr Mills.
   
In November 2014, Abolore applied for leave to remain in the UK, based 
on the birth of the child. However, the Facebook photos of Mr Gentry 
undermined their story, and it emerged that Ezekpo lived in the North 
East. Mr Mills said Abolore’s use of a false passport to get the care 
assistant job emerged during the police investigation, when detectives 
found a passport bearing Abolore’s picture but a different name.
   
The court heard that Abolore still insists that Ezekpo is the child’s father.
Abolore and Ezekpo, of Winlaton, near Gateshead, were found guilty by a jury of conspiracy to breach immigration law and gi.


 
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