Metro Nigerian Forges British Passport, Leaves In Council House For Over A Decade

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A Nigerian bus driver, Christopher Aghalibe, 53, forged a British passport so he could live in a council house for more than a decade, a court heard.

Aghalibe allegedly submitted the document along with his application for housing to the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham in September 2000, according to a report by Mailonline.

The bus driver allegedly used a British passport in the name of Kehinde Osula when he was given a tenancy in 2004, Snaresbrook Crown Court heard.

Fraud prevention unit officers finally attended his home in Wood Lane, Dagenham, on 10 August 2016, and he invited them in for a cup of tea.

Aghalibe claimed he came to London in 1990 but he often returned to his homeland to visit his sick father before his death, jurors heard.

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When he was asked to attend an interview at the council offices later that day he arrived with a copy of the passport in the name of Osula, it was claimed.

‘The way that the prosecution put the case is that, very simply, he knew he was not a British national and that he was telling a lie otherwise he would not be entitled to a council property,’ said prosecutor Nick Ham.

‘He had hoped he could dig himself out of a hole by going to the council office with the forged passport.’

Jurors were shown a copy of the falsified passport and the housing application form.

Aghalibe, of Wood Lane, Dagenham, denies one count of false accounting, one count of using a false instrument, one count of obtaining services by deception and one count of possession of a false identity document with improper intention. The trial continues.
 
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