[2025] UKUT 119 (AAC)
Upper Tribunal Administrative Appeals Chamber

[2025] UKUT 119 (AAC)

Fecha: 10-Mar-2025

The grant of permission to appeal

The grant of permission to appeal

16.

The appellant was granted permission to appeal by Judge Butler following an oral hearing. Judge Butler did not formally limit the grant of permission, but did identify the following specific factual findings of DBS as being arguable mistakes of fact and/or law (in the sense of being inadequately reasoned or evidenced):

a.

DBS’s finding that the appellant attempted to pay for indecent images of children, rather than that he attempted to pay for images of persons aged 18 and over;

b.

DBS’s finding that the appellant viewed the indecent image (video) of a child a second time rather than just that he accessed the dark web a second time;

c.

DBS’s finding that the appellant must have realised the female in the video was a child at the time that he masturbated, and not just subsequently as he said;

d.

DBS’s finding that the appellant went to great lengths to access the dark web, when in fact it was straightforward (and not illegal) to do so;

e.

DBS’s failure to address the substance of the references that the appellant had provided, and to take those into account when considering what risk he poses to children;

f.

DBS’s failure to take into account the appellant’s ASD diagnosis, and his difficulty identifying body language and facial emotion when considering the relevance of his statement that ‘it was weird because the kids didn’t look like they were in distress’.

17.

In addition, Judge Butler considered that it was arguable that the decision to bar the appellant was disproportionate.