Rita Ogunkunle (left) and her
boyfriend Michael Adebambo (right), 46, registered the baby as theirs at
Bromley Civic Centre
|
A Nigerian mother allowed a British
couple to register as her new baby's parents in bid to get free NHS care and
secure a UK passport for the child, a court heard.
Oluwaseun Adenubi, 30, also pleaded
guilty to fraud by false representation after using the passport of her friend,
Rita Ogunkunle, 32, to obtain free medical care after giving birth to Moses.
Ogunkunle and her boyfriend Michael
Adebambo, 46, registered the baby as theirs at Bromley Civic Centre the
following day and have now pleaded guilty to giving false information.
Staff at Farnborough's Princess
Royal University Hospital realised the medical records of Ogunkunle, who had
received acne treatment, conflicted with the patient claiming to be her.
Prosecutor Ms Alexandra Bushell told
the court: 'Maybe there was a motivation to secure the nationality of the child
as a British citizen and free NHS treatment.
'After the baby was born on June 20
staff realised something was not right because Ogunkunle has severe scarring,
which the baby's mother did not have and there were two different blood types
for the same patient.'
Adenubi was granted a family visit
visa which allowed her to stay in the UK for up to six months and claimed that
she found Ogunkunle's passport on a bench, Croydon Crown Court heard.
But when Ogunkunle was arrested in
August, she claimed Adenubi took her passport after moving into her spare room.
The couple have now fallen out with
Adenubi over the conflicting claims about the passport.
Ms Bushell said: 'She admitted
falsely registering the birth of the baby and said she had been introduced to
Adenubi by a friend of her mother's and took pity on her because she was
pregnant and had no friends.
'She told police she was angry at
Adenubi using her identity and tried to beat her to it by registering the
child.
'[Adebambo] said his girlfriend
asked him to go to the register office to register a birth and said she told
him she did not want another woman to use her identity.
'He said he did it out of love for
his girlfriend and was very remorseful.
'[Adenubi] claimed she was fleeing a
violent partner in Nigeria and claimed to have no family here and no contact
with her family in Nigeria.
'She said she arrived with nowhere
to go and met a Nigerian man at the airport and others via a church, but had no
details of those she stayed with.
'She claimed to have found
Ogunkunle's passport on a bench and only used it to get free medical services.'
The offences, contrary to the 1911
Perjury Act, carry a maximum sentence of seven years 'penal servitude'.
Judge John Tanzer said: 'The
probation service think this is a Nigerian plot to use the 'International
Health Service' and then take further advantage.'
All three were bailed until a date
to be fixed.
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