• Skip to Content
  • Skip to Channel Navigation
  • Skip to Information Links
  • Skip to Accessibility Information
HR Magazine LogoHR Magazine
  • Home
  •  
  • News
  •  
  • Features
  •  
  • HR TV
  •  
  • Suppliers
  •  
  • Solutions
  •  
  • Forums & Blogs
  •  
  • White Papers
  •  
  • Employee Benefits
  •  
  • Learning & Development
  •  
  • Employment Law
  •  
  • Recruitment
  •  
  • HR People
  •  
  • Research
  •  
  • Technology & Metrics
  •  
 
14 March 2010
  • Home:
  • Ministry of Justice's own recruitment system fails to spot an illegal immigrant
Ministry of Justice's own recruitment system fails to spot an illegal immigrant

Ministry of Justice's own recruitment system fails to spot an illegal immigrant

David Woods, 03 November 2009

 

Be the first to comment on this article

The Ministry of Justice has been employing illegal immigrants as civil servants.

 

According to reports in The Sunday Times, the employee in question was hired through a recruitment agency, which failed to carry out the required background checks.

The news comes only weeks after the attorney general, Baroness Scotland, was found to have illegally employed an illegal immigrant as a housekeeper.

John Barker, managing director at manufacturer of background checking tools TSSI, said: "It is worrying that this is still happening even after the Baroness Scotland incident recently. As a government department this is a poor example to set other UK businesses.

"It is imperative that these pre-employment checks are carried out or agencies risk damaging their reputation or having to pay hefty fines.

"There are tools available that allow employers to check the authenticity of ID documents such as passports, driving licences and Visa documents, ensuring their employees can work in the UK.
 
"Civil penalties are no idle threat. The UK Borders Authority is cracking down on illegal employment and companies could be looking at fines of up to £10,000 per illegal worker. This will make a huge dent in profits and is not something that businesses, in particular, recruitment agencies that are experiencing huge cut backs, can risk in the current economic climate."

 

X

You must login to use Clip & Save

  • Print
  • Email
  • Clip &
    Save
  • News
    by email
 

Share:

  • Bookmark on...
  • Del.icio.us
  • Stumble It!
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • DIGG
  • Google
  • Yahoo
 

Your Comment

 
 

To post comments please log in here

 

All Comments

There are currently no comments.

Related Media

How to manage a virtual business

Government's plan for immigration might be "too tough", says Institute of Public Policy Research

Call for raised qualification requirements for immigrant workers from outside the EU

Intra company transfers could provide loophole for non-EU graduates to enter UK

New measures will ensure UK workers will be given chance to apply for jobs before non-EU migrants

The Baroness Scotland case drives home to HR the importance of rigorous right to work checks

Latest News

John Terry and Ashley Cole: How to act when an employee's activities outside the workplace damages team morale within it

Royal Mail and CWU to sign deal to settle long-running dispute on postal workers' pay and conditions

Tribunal ruling on age discrimination claim is good news for employers and bad news for serial litigants

 
News By Email

Poll

Do you think a 21-hour working week will work to tackle issues such as overwork, unemployment, high carbon emissions, low wellbeing, inequalities and sustainability?

 

Directory

 

Latest Issue

Latest Issue

March 2010

Line managers are less critical of HR than they were a year ago - will this continue?

B&Q's HR director explains the company's focus on 18-24 year-olds

Can the science of analytics create super workforce planning?

CSR must be seen as an investment, not a business cost

 

 

Subscribe
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Skip to Main Navigation
Haymarket

Haymarket © 1957 – 2010

  • About Us
  • Register
  • News By Email
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Sitemap
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility
  • News
  • Features
  • Reviews
  • Management Today
 
  • Contact Us
  • News By Email
  • Advertising
  • Subscriptions
  • Newsfeeds
  • Sitemap
  • My HR
  • register
  • Log In