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No, this was handled entirely within my employment. However I am a bit worried as I have read that having notoriety "in the local or wider community by the scale and persistence of my behaviour." Any advise on the notoriety provision?alterhase58 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 07, 2020 7:44 amWere you reported to the police, taken to court and convicted of an offence?
You are overthinking. You had an issue with your employer regarding allegations and you were subsequently fired. As long as you didn't end up in court and found guilty, there is nothing to worry about. Anything between yourself and your employer, is a private matter.David1025 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 07, 2020 8:01 amNo, this was handled entirely within my employment. However I am a bit worried as I have read that having notoriety "in the local or wider community by the scale and persistence of my behaviour." Any advise on the notoriety provision?alterhase58 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 07, 2020 7:44 amWere you reported to the police, taken to court and convicted of an offence?
Thank you @alterhase58 that does clarify things a bit, however I am still bit concerned as the social media post has other former co-workers also posting, claiming the same behaviour going back several years - it is distressing as I did not even work with some of these people. It is scary how people are adding to the "fire".alterhase58 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 07, 2020 3:06 pmWe don't know which sources UKVI nationality case workers (not immigration officers!) use, except that it's a good guess they have access to many sources of information, such a government data, criminal records, credit reference data, and probably much more.
However, unless you are well known for your notoriety they cannot reject your application on just what they find on Google. Looking at the following sentence from the guidance should give you comfort on this point - note they use the terms "scale" and "persistence":
"However, where there is evidence that a person has, by the scale and persistence of
their behaviour, made themselves notorious in their local or the wider community,
you must consider refusing the application".
As @Zerubbabel says you are overthinking.
These things that happen on social media have no bearing on your citizenship application. Don't disclose anything. You are not going to tell the caseworker that you have bad reputation on Twitter and Facebook! You will be just sabotaging your own application by going into something that is not even relevant.Would it be a good idea to disclose this situation with the application so that I am frank about the situation? I also can provide references from former co-workers to counter act these claims.
If you tell the caseworker something like this they may likely take notice & weirdly can refuse you.It seems you have done something bad with work colleagues hence you are a bit concerned but better must not bring this dispute in an application.Home office doesn't follow its own guidance regularly .People with criminal record get citizenship in some cases & we have seen some cases where previous overstayers got naturalization.Your matter is irrelevant to the application .David1025 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 07, 2020 3:25 pmThank you @alterhase58 that does clarify things a bit, however I am still bit concerned as the social media post has other former co-workers also posting, claiming the same behaviour going back several years - it is distressing as I did not even work with some of these people. It is scary how people are adding to the "fire".alterhase58 wrote: ↑Mon Sep 07, 2020 3:06 pmWe don't know which sources UKVI nationality case workers (not immigration officers!) use, except that it's a good guess they have access to many sources of information, such a government data, criminal records, credit reference data, and probably much more.
However, unless you are well known for your notoriety they cannot reject your application on just what they find on Google. Looking at the following sentence from the guidance should give you comfort on this point - note they use the terms "scale" and "persistence":
"However, where there is evidence that a person has, by the scale and persistence of
their behaviour, made themselves notorious in their local or the wider community,
you must consider refusing the application".
As @Zerubbabel says you are overthinking.
Would it be a good idea to disclose this situation with the application so that I am frank about the situation? I also can provide references from former co-workers to counter act these claims.
If social media worries you, its best to deactivate your account for the time being. But as previously mentioned above, your only overthinking.
....I am over thinking it again?