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AVID Visitor Handbook
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  • Welcome
  • Introduction
    • About AVID
    • About this Handbook
  • Getting started as a visitor
    • Introduction
      • Why Visit People in Detention
      • The Role of a Visitor
      • Joining a visitor group
    • Practicalities of visiting
      • Models of visiting
      • Booking a social visit
      • What to expect on arrival
      • What to expect in a visiting room
      • What to expect in prisons
      • How do people in detention find out about visitors?
    • Visiting Skills
      • Being worthy of trust
      • Empathetic listening
      • Demonstrating independence
      • Boundaries and safeguarding
    • What issues might someone raise and what can I do?
    • Step-by-step: Before, during and after a visit
    • Find a visitor group
    • Useful organisations
    • Visitor wellbeing
  • Who can be detained
    • Introduction
    • Who, Why, When
    • Decisions to Detain
    • Lawfulness of Detention
    • People considered unsuitable for detention
    • Demographics
  • Immigration Detention in the UK: Essential Legislation, Policy and Guidance
    • Introduction
    • Essential Immigration and Asylum Law for Visitors
      • UK legislation on asylum and detention
      • International Framework
      • Claiming asylum in the UK
      • Post Brexit Changes
    • Detention Policy and Guidance
      • Overview and Sources
      • Detention General Instructions
      • Detention Centre and Short-Term Holding Facility Rules
      • Detention Operating Standards
      • Detention Service Orders
      • Prison Service Instructions & Probation Orders
      • Home Office Policy and Guidance
      • What can visitors do?
  • Immigration detention in the prison estate
    • Introduction
    • Legal Framework
    • Why are people detained in the prison estate?
    • History of the use of prisons to detain people held under immigration powers
    • Additional layers of disadvantage
    • Criticisms on the use of Prison for Immigration Detention and Further Reading
    • Organisations offering legal advice & practical help in prisons
  • Legal Advice and Representation
    • Introduction
    • Legal Advice and Representation
      • Why do people in detention need legal advice?
      • What is legal aid and what does it cover?
      • Who can give immigration legal advice?
      • The Legal Aid Agency Detention Duty Advice Scheme in IRCs
      • How do I know if a solicitor is doing a good job?
    • What can visitors do?
      • Finding a legal advisor
      • Finding a legal advisor for a person detained under immigration powers in the prison estate
      • Notify a legal representative that their detained client has been moved to another IRC
      • Help a person in detention to understand what they can reasonably expect of their lawyer
      • Give Information
      • Visitors and legal advisors: constructive relationships
      • Help if there are problems with the current legal representative
      • Acting as a McKenzie Friend
  • Safeguards
    • Introduction
    • Harms of detention: what safeguarding concerns do visitors come across in detention?
      • Deteriorating mental health
      • Worsening of pre-existing health needs
      • Trauma and mental health conditions that are common in detention
      • Failures in continuity of care
      • Mistreatment and abuse
      • Disbelief
      • Suicidal thoughts and self-harm
      • Survivors of torture, human trafficking and modern slavery
      • People who lack decision-making capacity
      • Age disputed children
    • Policy and practice
      • Adults at Risk Policy (AAR)
        • Background to the Adults at Risk Policy
        • Ongoing Criticisms and Developments
        • Present position of the AAR and oversight
      • Healthcare screening, assessment and monitoring
        • Healthcare safeguarding reports: Rule 35 and Rule 32
        • Challenges and concerns about reporting under Rules 32/35
        • Key Points for Visitors
      • The ACDT System
        • Challenges and concerns
      • Use of Segregation
        • Challenges and concerns
      • National Referral Mechanism
        • Challenges and concerns
      • The Mental Capacity Act 2005
        • Challenges and concerns
      • Age Assessments
        • Challenges and concerns
    • A series of case studies
      • Dawit
      • Ali
      • Drita
      • Bao
      • Gabriel
    • What can visitors do
      • Safeguarding Principles
      • Emotional support through empathetic and active listening
      • Worried about someone’s deteriorating mental and physical health
      • Access to Medical Information
      • Support after release
    • Looking after your own wellbeing
    • Useful Organisations
  • Getting out of detention
    • Introduction
    • Immigration Bail Overview
      • Secretary of State Bail
      • Immigration Tribunal Bail
    • Bail addresses and Home Office accommodation
    • Offering financial condition supporters/sureties
    • Refusal of bail and further bail applications
    • Bail with or without a legal advisor
    • Bail for people detained in the prison estate
    • Mandatory electronic monitoring for those facing deportation
    • Bail and removal directions
    • What can visitors do?
    • Life after release
  • Removal, Return, and Deportation
    • Introduction
    • Definitions
    • Being ‘liable to removal’ or ‘liable to deportation’ and Notices
    • Third Country Removals
    • Deportation
    • Getting on the plane
    • Assisted Voluntary Returns Schemes
    • Family Returns Process
    • Consequences of being removed or deported for return to the UK
    • What can visitors do?
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  1. Legal Advice and Representation
  2. What can visitors do?

Finding a legal advisor

PreviousWhat can visitors do?NextFinding a legal advisor for a person detained under immigration powers in the prison estate

Last updated 20 days ago

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A visitor must be aware of whether or not the person detained who they are visiting has a legal advisor. If they are unrepresented, they will need a legal representative and a visitor may be able to help them to find one. It is very common for a visitor to be asked to help find a legal advisor for someone they are visiting, and visitors frequently contact AVID to express their concern about poor access to immigration advice for a person detained under immigration powers. Some AVID member organisations have successfully lobbied the Legal Aid Agency for more legal surgeries in IRCs, but it still feels like a struggle for a person detained under immigration to get advice, and this can be most hugely stressful and upsetting when removal is only days or hours away.

People detained in IRCs may seek immigration legal advice free of charge through the The Legal Aid Agency Detention Duty Advice Scheme in IRCs.

You can find out who the legal aid provider firms with an IRC contract are by checking the current rota, available from AVID or your group coordinator. You should check with your group coordinator how sign-up works locally so you are ready to offer this information to people in detention - it is usually done by making a request for a lawyer in either the library or the welfare centre. Referrals can also be made to a provider who has a contract for that centre outside of the surgeries. However, the provider can refuse instructions in this circumstance and are only obliged to take on clients seen at a surgery. Research shows that many in detention are not aware of the scheme, that it operates in all IRCs, or that the advice given will be free of charge. Visitors can help by ensuring that this is understood. You can also prepare someone with what to expect before an appointment, encouraging them to attend the appointment prepared and make sure that they ask for an appointment summary.

Solicitors firms and other advice organisations who operate under legal aid cannot give immigration advice under legal aid to someone detained in an IRC unless their firm or organisation holds an exclusive IRC contract with the LAA to do so. A firm that purports to be able to give legal aid advice but does not have an IRC contract is probably best avoided.

Those who can pay fees for private work are free to choose their own representative from any firm or other legal advice provider, they are not limited to a firm on the rota for their IRC that week. It is a good idea for a detained person to conduct their own research on the quality of a legal advisor before handing over money to them. Unfortunately, rogue solicitors or people who pass themselves off as immigration lawyers have been known to operate in detention centres, preying on the desperation of people who want to remain in the UK. Their names are generally passed around by others in detention. Typically, they ask for substantial payments in advance and then disappear.

People in detention may also seek advice from a law centre, or an accredited legal charity like Asylum Aid, Coram Children's Legal Centre, or Bail for Immigration Detainees (BID). Not for profit advisors and private firms are not restricted by the LAA’s exclusive arrangements for providing legal aid advice in IRCs and can operate in any IRC or prison.

In certain circumstances, visitors can refer to solicitor firms who specialise in human rights and public law detention cases. These firms can support people when there is reason to believe that detention is unlawful, for example because of a human rights abuse or someone is detained when they should not be (e.g. because there is no real prospect of removal). These firms are usually unable to meet the demands for their services and will often prioritise cases for existing clients or where the facts of a case are particularly egregious. You can find out more on their websites on the types of claims that they specialise in and they might be looking for cases to support a specific type of claim where they have existing public cases in that area.

If you believe that the person you are visiting is detained unlawfully, and the person has given you expressed permission, you can contact a law firm to see if they can assist that person. The best way to do this is via email, providing as much detail of the case as you can.

Essential information you can give a lawyer

If you are helping someone to find a lawyer, having some basic information to hand about their case may help a lawyer in making a decision about whether they are able to assist (e.g. what stage of the asylum process are they at, their nationality, any immediate family members in the UK, is removal imminent?). If you are able to provide additional paperwork, the better informed the lawyer will be. Make sure you have the person’s written consent to share information about them with other people.

A letter of authority giving permission for a visitor to provide basic information to a solicitor for the purpose of helping a person detained under immigration powers to get a legal representative might look like this:

LETTER OF AUTHORITY

I, ……………………….., currently held in ……………………………. Give my permission to the person named below to provide basic information about my immigration case and my detention on my behalf to any solicitor, barrister, or OISC accredited immigration advisor for the purpose of seeking a legal representative.

Name of person authorised to share information…………………………

Capacity in which they are acting on my behalf………………………….

Date ……………………………….

Signature ……………………….

Name in capitals ……………………….

Searchable lists of immigration and public law solicitors, and immigration advisors

The Immigration Law Practitioner's Association (ILPA) website has a list of members searchable by geographic area via the . ILPA’s list allows you to restrict your search to legal aid or free advisors, and to find advisors that can work with clients in particular languages.

The Law Society website feature has searchable lists of members operating in England and Wales, including approved immigration legal advisors and public law specialists. See also and .

IAA (previously known as OISC)

The Immigration Advice Authority (IAA), which regulates immigration advice provided by non-solicitors barristers, has a “Adviser Finder” feature on its website which allows you to search the register of accredited advisors. Available here: .

This from Migrants Organise includes the government list of legal aid lawyers.

You can try contacting your local and may be able to help people find solicitors in some cases.

Public Law Firms Specialising in Unlawful Detention Claims:

‘Find immigration advice’ button on their homepage
Find A Solicitor
The Law Society of Scotland
The Law Society of Northern Ireland
Adviser Finder (oisc.gov.uk)
flyer
Law Centres Network
Citizens Advice
Wilsons Solicitors
Bindmans
Duncan Lewis
Leigh Day
Deighton Pierce Glynn
Fadiga & Co.
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Searchable lists of immigration and public law solicitors, and immigration advisors

  • The Immigration Law Practitioner's Association (ILPA) website has a list of members searchable by geographic area via the ‘’ button on their homepage. ILPA’s list allows you to restrict your search to legal aid or free advisors, and to find advisors that can work with clients in particular languages.

  • The Law Society website feature has searchable lists of members operating in England and Wales, including approved immigration legal advisors and public law specialists. See also and .

  • The Immigration Advice Authority, which regulates immigration advice provided by non-solicitors barristers, has a feature on its website which allows you to search the register of accredited advisors.

  • Citizens Advice may be able to help people find solicitors in some cases.

Find immigration advice
Find A Solicitor
The Law Society of Scotland
The Law Society of Northern Ireland
“Adviser Finder”