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Alurra71 said:
I would appeal and while waiting collect all the necessary documents and information to counteract each point the vo made in the refusal letter.

I agree that the OP should try to appeal. However due to OP's hubby willfully break the condition of the first offense, thus getting a more serious second offence, will be a sticking point that will be hard to counteract.

The only way to counteract is if his employer forces him to drive without insurance but this is not the case here.

Screech339
 
screech339 said:
I agree that the OP should try to appeal. However due to OP's hubby willfully break the condition of the first offense, thus getting a more serious second offence, will be a sticking point that will be hard to counteract.

The only way to counteract is if his employer forces him to drive without insurance but this is not the case here.

Screech339

It probably is, but I was going on the information the VO provided in the refusal. He/She specifically states each point the OP tried to make in the application and counters it with what was supplied and how it was not enough. I read it kind of like "We didn't accept that because, but if you had supplied us with this ... *

I might be way off base and all rejection letters might well look the same, but it did kind of appear that they were essentially given a way to appeal it and win?

Like, how they didn't prove that OP hubby didn't have funds to sponsor her to live in the UK? Why would they even mention that if they weren't kind of giving them an 'out' there? *shrugs*

I dunno, like I said, I might be so far off base that I'm not even playing in the same field anymore! LOL