+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445

Need urgent advice

canadianwoman

VIP Member
Nov 6, 2009
6,200
282
Category........
Visa Office......
Accra, Ghana
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
30-01-2008
Interview........
05-05-2009
First of all, if you choose to just end your immigration quest, the Canadian government will not care. If you do not appeal or refile, you will never hear from the gov't about this again. Your wife has nothing to worry about on that front.
stuck guys wife said:
From the beginning neither of us wanted a wedding - western or punjabi - so this was perfect for us. Or so we thought until not having a big ceremony (especially punjabi) bit us in the you-know-what with the VO.
Unfortunately for you two, the one country where the VOs seem to expect a big, lavish, traditional wedding is India. Ordinarily the size of the wedding ceremony doesn't matter - plenty of people from other countries have been accepted with only a court wedding.
Another problem we're having though is getting conflicting information from lawyers and consultants. One says it's better to appeal because if we re-file the second VO is just going to go with the same decision as the first. The other says to re-file because appealing takes much longer, and the first decision has nothing to do with the second...
The problem here is that it is not 100% certain what is the best choice - it is basically just an educated guess what will be the best route. VOs do tend to go with the first decision, so you would have to provide a lot of evidence showing why the first decision is wrong - for either an appeal or a new application. In either case, get the CAIPS notes and see what all the reasons were for the VO's decision. Then get evidence to refute or explain each problem.
... that us being interracial is/was a problem or would have added to the refusal as well, which seems incredibly un-Canadian to me.
It was probably a problem. Any difference is a potential source of concern for the VO: racial, religious, a big age gap, educational, etc. You just have to explain why it is not an issue for you two.
 

sheila la

Star Member
May 12, 2010
172
2
Ontario Canada
Category........
Visa Office......
Cairo
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
18Aug14
Doc's Request.
11Oct14
AOR Received.
14012011
File Transfer...
Sponsorship Approval 13Jan15, file sent to Cairo
Med's Request
13Jan15
Med's Done....
14Feb15
Interview........
Not Expected as this is a child sponsorship
I'm a little confused about your question. It appears you think you will be in trouble for some reason because you were denied. If you appeal or decide not to, why would it cause you problems. It sounds like there is more to this than is being stated.

stuck guys wife said:
Our marriage is on the rocks, and as you can imagine, this refusal is just compounding our stress and making things worse.

Honestly, at this point we're not sure if our relationship can even be repaired - especially long distance.

We don't know what we're going to do yet, we just want to understand all our options.

What my husband (and I) are asking is if we call it quits and don't re-file or appeal, will it cause us/me problems?

We can't be the only ones in this situation...
 

Stuckguy

Full Member
Apr 13, 2010
23
0
Category........
Visa Office......
ND
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
Oct2010
File Transfer...
Nov 2010
Med's Done....
July 2010
Interview........
May 18 2011
Passport Req..
Dec 2010
sheila la said:
I'm a little confused about your question. It appears you think you will be in trouble for some reason because you were denied. If you appeal or decide not to, why would it cause you problems. It sounds like there is more to this than is being stated.
Sheila la, yes we both think that due to the denial reason being : they didnt find me "genuine", we fear that if we cut this process and move on with our lives would they really think that we were frauds and trouble us?
Both of us have gone through the worse times in our life in last 1 and half year. and the future process to continue would take almost the same time if not less, we are already so broken emotionally & mentally that we dont want to go through more of it.. however yes we do not want any other trouble aswell. Thats it.
 

Stuckguy

Full Member
Apr 13, 2010
23
0
Category........
Visa Office......
ND
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
Oct2010
File Transfer...
Nov 2010
Med's Done....
July 2010
Interview........
May 18 2011
Passport Req..
Dec 2010
canadianwoman said:
First of all, if you choose to just end your immigration quest, the Canadian government will not care. If you do not appeal or refile, you will never hear from the gov't about this again. Your wife has nothing to worry about on that front.Unfortunately for you two, the one country where the VOs seem to expect a big, lavish, traditional wedding is India. Ordinarily the size of the wedding ceremony doesn't matter - plenty of people from other countries have been accepted with only a court wedding.The problem here is that it is not 100% certain what is the best choice - it is basically just an educated guess what will be the best route. VOs do tend to go with the first decision, so you would have to provide a lot of evidence showing why the first decision is wrong - for either an appeal or a new application. In either case, get the CAIPS notes and see what all the reasons were for the VO's decision. Then get evidence to refute or explain each problem.It was probably a problem. Any difference is a potential source of concern for the VO: racial, religious, a big age gap, educational, etc. You just have to explain why it is not an issue for you two.
Thank you for the advice Canadian women, when i went for the interview the VO was cutting me short of my answers, i could clearly see that she came with a pre-conceived notion that this is a fake marriage.
she was pretty much stuck on why was there no one from our families, and even though i told her that had we been in canada or India there would still not have been many people over there. both of us are very reserve. She was not ready to take this answer. and later when the denial letter came and i saw the visa officer's name, i got to know she was a punjabi and then i could make out why she was so adamant, in a punjabi culture there is always a lavish wedding.

I thought that if they would really think that this is not real then atleast they would probe my wife, which they never bothered to.
 

canadianwoman

VIP Member
Nov 6, 2009
6,200
282
Category........
Visa Office......
Accra, Ghana
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
30-01-2008
Interview........
05-05-2009
Stuckguy said:
Sheila la, yes we both think that due to the denial reason being : they didnt find me "genuine", we fear that if we cut this process and move on with our lives would they really think that we were frauds and trouble us?
They won't. If the gov't did investigate (and it won't), they would see you are still together after the refusal, so obviously not fake. Or if you did break up, you could tell them the stress of the application process and the long time apart had hurt your relationship. There is no way for them to prove that that is not true.
 

lenardparnold

Star Member
Sep 5, 2010
162
10
123
Canada/Thailand
Visa Office......
Singapore
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
20/10/2010 sent to Canada
File Transfer...
29/11/2010 Sponsorship approved, PR app sent to Singapore
"Unfortunately for you two, the one country where the VOs seem to expect a big, lavish, traditional wedding is India. Ordinarily the size of the wedding ceremony doesn't matter - plenty of people from other countries have been accepted with only a court wedding."

Such culturally closed-minded individuals shouldn't even be able to have positions of power for such sensitive issues. Especially when they are representing Canada...
 
Jul 25, 2011
5
0
sheila la said:
I'm a little confused about your question. It appears you think you will be in trouble for some reason because you were denied. If you appeal or decide not to, why would it cause you problems. It sounds like there is more to this than is being stated.
Other than the hairy personal details of our situation, there isn't. We love each other, but there are some issues/factors we don't know if we can get past. We've been working on it for months.TMI but there you go.

With the state of our relationship right now we don't know if it's wise to appeal (if we do, we only have a few more days to make that decision) or re-file immediately. If we wait until our relationship is stable again to re-file, who knows what that will look like to a second VO. My guess would be not good.

All we're asking is if we can't work things out and file for divorce - whether it's 6 months or 6 years down the road - are we in for additional legal issues? Maybe we've just heard too many immigration horror stories or urban legends, but we don't want to be blind-sided. We're just trying to cover our bases and understand what we're in for if it comes to parting ways.

Again, thanks to all of you from both of us. We really appreciate your advice and support.
 

canadianwoman

VIP Member
Nov 6, 2009
6,200
282
Category........
Visa Office......
Accra, Ghana
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
30-01-2008
Interview........
05-05-2009
stuck guys wife said:
All we're asking is if we can't work things out and file for divorce - whether it's 6 months or 6 years down the road - are we in for additional legal issues?
CIC and Canada Border Services get lots of complaints from Canadians that they have been tricked into a fake marriage, and that their spouse ran off as soon as they got to Canada. However, the government usually does nothing about these cases, because often it is a he-said/she-said situation, there is no proof, the gov't thinks the Canadian is just being vindictive, and also because of the lack of manpower available to investigate. If the gov't won't even bother investigating probable marriages of convenience that have been brought to their attention, they are not going to investigate a couple that no one has complained about.
There are two scenarios where you might have problems: 1. someone who knows you writes a letter to CIC or CBSA stating you tried to commit marriage fraud; or 2. the wife divorces this husband, marries another foreigner, and tries to sponsor him. Usually in 1 they ignore such 'poison pen' letters, and in any case if there was an investigation they would still need proof; in 2, you would just have to increase the amount of proof you submit that the second marriage is genuine.
I have heard of cases where a permanent resident got in trouble because of a marriage of convenience - the sponsor can lose his/her PR even years after the marriage if it is later found to be fraudulent. This has usually been because after a quick divorce the PR quickly remarries and tries to sponsor a new spouse. I've never heard of a Canadian spouse getting in trouble because of such things.
 

Leon

VIP Member
Jun 13, 2008
21,950
1,318
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
I have never heard of a Canadian getting in trouble over such things either but I did hear of a case where a woman who was sponsored as a wife had gotten divorced, re-married and then tried to sponsor another spouse. Immigration found that the first marriage had been a marriage of convenience and as such, she never should have gotten her PR so they revoked it.
 

canadianwoman

VIP Member
Nov 6, 2009
6,200
282
Category........
Visa Office......
Accra, Ghana
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
30-01-2008
Interview........
05-05-2009
Do you know what happened after that? Did she drag out the appeals for 5 or 6 years, and then win the right to stay on H&C grounds? (I'm guessing.)
 

Leon

VIP Member
Jun 13, 2008
21,950
1,318
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
It was on this forum that I saw it, somebody posted a link to it. I am not sure it had a follow up story, just that they ruled that she should lose her PR.

She would then have the option like you said of appealing for 5 or 6 years while her husband is waiting to be sponsored in another country, likely not able to get a visa to visit her and she can't leave because who knows if they would let her back in. It's not a situation somebody would want to be in.
 
Jul 25, 2011
5
0
Thanks all, you've taken some of the weight off our minds.
I guess it just feels like if you don't do things just so in this process, or don't fit into the mould, you're screwed. Had we realised not having a traditional ceremony would be the deciding factor we would have found a way to have one - whether we wanted to or not. We thought the majority of the decision would be based on the proof of our history as a couple, and we had tons of that.
Hopefully we can work through our issues, stay together and live happily ever after (in the same country!).
 

mittens

Star Member
Jan 13, 2011
188
3
Category........
Visa Office......
London
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
23-05-2011
Med's Done....
20-04-2011
just wanted to say i am really sorry that you're going through all this stress...
hopefully you can find the strength to appeal, don't give up is my advice
but i'm a hopeless romantic lol