Bid to stop deportation of autistic Dudley man

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Osime Brown in a school portraitImage source, Family handout
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His family say it would be a "double punishment" to deport Osime Brown to Jamaica where he would have "no support"

More than 100,000 people have signed a petition to spare a man with autism from deportation.

Osime Brown, 21, faces being returned to Jamaica, which he left at the age of four, due to a 2018 conviction for robbery.

Joan Martin said her son could not understand deportation and asked her which bus he would need to catch from Jamaica to visit her at home in Dudley.

The Home Office said Mr Brown's case would be "for the courts to decide".

Minister Kevin Foster cited the UK Borders Act of 2007, external which says "foreign criminals" are subject to automatic deportation. However, campaigners for Mr Brown say he has no support network in Jamaica and would not cope.

Image source, Family handout
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Ms Martin said her son was "a broken soul" after he was told he would be deported

Mr Brown was jailed for the robbery of a phone from a teenager, attempted robbery and perverting the course of justice.

His lawyers have expressed concern about the role of the joint enterprise law in the case. It was often used in gang cases as it allowed for group culpability for crimes.

However, it has been criticised as a "lazy law", with a large proportion of those convicted being young black and mixed race men.

Image source, Family handout
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Mr Brown has severe learning disabilities and has been diagnosed with depression and PTSD since he was jailed

Ms Martin said her son had been self-harming in prison, from where he is due to be released this week, adding "everything is draining from him".

"I have to be honest with him, I said if they deport you, you can't come back," she said. "He looked like the light when you turn it off."

Sarah Ricca is one of Mr Brown's solicitors and said his case had "struck a chord" with people.

Image source, Family handout
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A petition to stop Mr Brown's deportation has attracted more than 115,000 signatures

"It's very hard not to be concerned that the system now grinds away and fails to take proper account of his particular condition and the particular risks it poses," she said.

Ms Martin said her son had fallen through the cracks and been let down by the government throughout his life.

"To offload him to another country without helping him would be cold."

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Amendment 8 October 2020: This story has been updated to make clear lawyers' concerns about the role of the joint enterprise law in the wider court case and to specify details of Osime Brown's convictions.