Were there convictions?hi,
i have some concern about my application for citizenship,i send my application this month, but in the last year i have some issues with the police ,i want to know if it will affect my application?
Check https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/become-canadian-citizen/eligibility/situtations-prevent-citizenship.html to find out which situations may prevent you from becoming a Canadian citizen.hi,
i have some concern about my application for citizenship,i send my application this month, but in the last year i have some issues with the police ,i want to know if it will affect my application?
i mean what police issue's you worrying about if there's no conviction?no there is no convictions, and none of this situation apply to me,i will try to talk with a lawyer..
thanks for the reply
do you believe its a criminal record?well i had some problem with my husband,and i took my son and i go to shelter,and he call the police on me and he told them that i kidnap my son and that i have suicide ideas,so the police come and talk with me in the shelter and i say to them that i will go back to my husband and we try to solve our problem,then after that time go ,and i call the police on him ,because he cut TV and internet on me,,(he is so controlling)that's it ,the police couldn't do nothing ,they go,so i was thinking maybe it will cause me some trouble this situation,because the police have my name in their files...
ExactlyIf you don't have pending charges or have been convicted, I don't believe you have any issues in terms of the police where your citizenship application is concerned.
Just being in contact with the police is not an issue, at all. The type of interactions you've described won't even be visible to IRCC, so there's nothing to worry about on that front.i don't have pending charges ,not convicted ,
good to hear that ,thank you
thank you brother ,i was worry about this matter,so in the interview if they ask me ,if i had issues with police ,what i should say ,yes or no?Just being in contact with the police is not an issue, at all. The type of interactions you've described won't even be visible to IRCC, so there's nothing to worry about on that front.
At your interview they will ask you to sign a form confirming you've not been prohibited. That form basically is the same question that was asked in question 16 of your application. They may ask you to verbally confirm that none of the conditions apply to you.thank you brother ,i was worry about this matter,so in the interview if they ask me ,if i had issues with police ,what i should say ,yes or no?
good,thank you so muchAt your interview they will ask you to sign a form confirming you've not been prohibited. That form basically is the same question that was asked in question 16 of your application. They may ask you to verbally confirm that none of the conditions apply to you.
They are unlikely to ask if you've had issues with the police. If they ask something it's more likely to be more specific (like if you have been arrested or if you have been charged). Based on what you've described, none of that applies, you can just respond with a "no".
If (and this seems extremely unlikely) they were to ask something generic, like if you've been in contact with the police, you can just mention that a while ago the police had been called in a dispute with your spouse, but that no arrests were made and no charges were filed.