Okay you aren't answering my question nor are you understanding that none of these comments impress us. I once met the Primer Minister of Australia and got to have a photo taken with Justin Trudeau. None of that mattered for my immigration.
You assisting a senior attorney to draft laws has no bearing on your immigration application. In Canada, your chances of immigration are based on facts, not your connections to a senior lawyer or a superior court, or the president of the USA.
To immigrate to Canada, you generally need:
- To be young: Age 20-40
- Be highly educated - 4-year degree/Master's/PHD (trades are different)
- Have several years of skilled foreign work experience
- Have at least 1 year of skilled Canadian work experience
- Extremely good English and/or French (preferably both)
Other things that increase your chances:
- Relatives in Canada
- Nomination from a province
- Job offer from an employer
- Experience in a high-demand or critical skills occupation (healthcare etc.)
All of these things are assessed under various program to assign applicants with a score, which are based on the above facts. So you need to calculate your score through Express Entry or the various provincial nominee programs.
Again, no-one really cares or needs to know about what exactly you did in your job, or who you are connected to. What matters is how much skilled work experience you have (you should Google what skilled work experience and your NOC/TEER are). And that's only one aspect of your profile.
From what you're telling me I don't think you really understand how this works, so you're better off seeing a consultant who can can guide you through the process.