qtazngal
Hero Member
- Sep 9, 2010
- 255
- 3
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- London
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 02 February 2012
- AOR Received.
- none
- File Transfer...
- 20-08-2012
- Med's Done....
- 05 January 2012
- Interview........
- Waived
tuyen said:I would advise you to speak with an immigration lawyer, because his case may not fall under the usual criminal inadmissibility rules.
Normally, when a person has a conviction on their record, it makes them inadmissible to Canada unless a minimum of five years has passed since the date of the conviction, or they've applied for rehabilitation. However, both of those conditions apply only to cases where the same crime would've resulted in a prison sentence of under 10 years if the crime had been committed in Canada. So the question is, would he have received a jail sentence of any kind had the offense taken place in Canada. In all likelihood, the answer is no.
In your husband's case, he didn't receive a sentence in his home country, but he did get a fine and (from what you said) he's been convicted, which means it will be on his police record which he will have to submit to CIC as part of his application.
All of this is addressed in the Sponsorship Guide for the applicant, and Table 1 deals with the time frames and conditions, but I would urge you to contact an immigration lawyer and pay for one hour of their time just to give you a qualified answer. The lawyer would need to consult the Criminal Code to look up your husband's exact offense and to see if it would require any jail time in Canada.
Hi Tuyen
Thanks. I might have to speak to a lawyer just to clarify. Actually this happened 2 years ago. We have declared it to CIC and it is in his England police record which we sent along with the application forms. To be honest just like I said to CJG that I thought this conviction does not fall under the unadmissible rules as his conviction was not including jail term or suspended sentence, basically just like a slap on the wrist. But just to be on the clarification side, will speak to a lawyer.
Thanks