News about Tom Kelly

The 'cash for care jobs' controversy has been exposed. Unqualified immigrants are being looked after by vulnerable UK residents as a result of a '100% success rate' in obtaining work visas

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 3, 2024
According to a Mail investigation, migrant vulnerable care residents are being looked after by unqualified migrants as rogue agents exploit Home Office loopholes. Scant checks in the desperate search for big vacancies mean untrained and overworked staff, who are often unable to speak English, are left homeless in the under-strain sector. Several organizations charged overseas applicants 'work finder fees' up to £20,000 to help them get a visa that allows them to come and stay here, according to our investigation into the 'cash for care jobs scandal.' One 'advisor', a Baptist minister (pictured), told an undercover reporter that for £9,000 he could help her find a job in a matter of three days - with '100 percent' success.

SMALL CAP MOVERS: Adnams is seeking a new source of funding as losses climb

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 16, 2024
Ghost Ship and Broadside, a Aquis-listed, Suffolk-based brewer of famous scoops, has revealed that it is vying for new private funding for the company. The board of directors of Adnams plc wishes to clarify that the company has asked advisors to investigate a variety of options to fund the company's future growth prospects,' the company reported.'

Unrivalled!The Mail is nominated for yet more reporting accolades by the judges at the British Journalism Awards

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 27, 2023
The judges at the British Journalism Awards are now recognizing our unrivalled reporting just less than a week after the Mail's triumph at the London Press Club Awards. Liz Hull and Caroline Cheetham's groundbreaking The Trial of Lucy Letby podcast sparked two of the Mail's top ten nominations, leading into a new future. It also received recognition for the Innovation of the Year and the Crime and Legal Journalism Awards, which added to its growing list of honors. Also praised was Tom Kelly and Izzy Lyons' undercover investigation into corrupt immigration lawyers. Their fearless reporting caused shockwaves around the legal profession, and they've been voted finalists for Year of the Year in our investigation.

The most senior police officer in Northern Ireland is under pressure to resign due to a data leak

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 16, 2023
Chief Constable Simon Byrne (pictured), a chief constable of Northern Ireland's Police Service, revealed that the names and addresses of over 10,000 officers and staff were now in the custody of dissident republicans. Many, including Tom Kelly, the former vice chairman of the Social Democratic and Labour Party, were among those to call for Mr Byrne to resign. However, Democratic Unionist Party leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson told BBC Radio 4's Today show: "It's important that he controls this phase of the process." The force's chief constable is sworn onto by the Minister of Justice for the devolved government, a post that has been open since the demise of power sharing last year.'

EXCLUSIVE: Following a massive data leak that revealed every member of Northern Ireland's service, more than 600 police officers working with MI5 are 'at risk,' according to the source

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 9, 2023
The shocking details of the data leak, which named every officer in Northern Ireland, will be revealed today. The paper, which was mistakenly published by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), identifies officers in the most critical positions, including those in 'ethical areas' of the service, close protection officers, and others working undercover to thwart terrorists. The list of 10,000 PSNI staff includes over 560 officers working in intelligence and counter-terrorism, as well as over 100 in surveillance units. It also identified nearly 40 people working at MI5's Northern Ireland headquarters.

Video reveals how the Daily Mail took down rogue immigration lawyers

www.dailymail.co.uk, July 28, 2023
The revelation of corrupt immigration lawyers in the Daily Mail this week has left rogue solictors across Britain facing a crackdown. To help clients obtain asylum, we've outlined how employees at certain companies are charging up to £10,000 to invent stories of torture, assassination threats, and modern slavery. As Rishi Sunak and Ministers press for action, watch our video explainer with a shocking video of one lawyer asking for money to invent the horrific back story and another offering anti-depressants to help with the demonition. Our reporter appears in an undercover video as an economic immigrant who had arrived in the United Kingdom unlawfully, and he found legal staff eager to assist him in submitting false asylum claims. Following criticism from the Prime Minister and lawmakers from both political parties, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has promised to take'urgent action'. Recapping a week of reporting by the Mail's team of Tom Kelly and Izzy Lyons and Jason Groves, watch this video of how the story unfolded here:

Mother Eliza admits to her dissatisfaction with social workers and courts that have allowed the programmer to have complete control of her toddler

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 31, 2022
After the courts rubber-stamped a foster deal with her forged signature, police arrived at the mother's house and arrested her son. Colin English (left and right), who had been charged with murder in 1991, but was cleared on a judge's instructions, but was cleared on a bogus deal. The 'deceitful and manipulative' computer programmer and his partner, Yvonne, were allowed to keep the baby for more than four months. He used his access to the mother's house to launch a movement to convince social workers that she had agreed to hand over her son. To prove his innocence, he used official letters, the child's passport, and his birth certificate. He also reported "groundless allegations" of her mistreating her children to a council's social services branch. Officials were unable to speak to the mother or get her version of events before he became detained, incredibly, despite a health worker's concern that Mr English was 'grooming' the woman. Therese Clare Terry, pictured (inset).