Same thing happened with me. She got all her dates wrong and said that my husband was not credible when it was her that did not review my paperwork. It's a long two years, but you can make it. What I did was made a disclosure and request for ADR on the grounds that the visa officer lacked attention to detail and was very subjective. Luckily I had my full hearing December 2018 and the minister's counsel did not question me as she reviewed my original disclosure but decided on a full hearing to speak to my husband and hear his side. Some of them are very spiteful and play with their power. It is unfortunate but stay positive!Yeah, I have read similar stories on here about the visa officer twisting things around and lying about some of the applicant's answers. In our case the visa officer fabricated 20 questions in a question and answer format - none of which were asked at my husband's interview. The interview notes had the date of December 19th and not October 15th the date my husband had the interview. They were put in under a different ID than the ID of the visa officer that interviewed my husband. It looks like the visa officer's supervisor had to make up some notes because he didn't make any. I think the supervisor could be trying to say they called my husband and interviewed him too, and if that is the case we can prove that is untrue with phone records. In any case, I think it should be suspect and showing our story more likely to be true because the notes were put in over 2 months after the interview by a visa officer that didn't even interview my husband. I think that is why our lawyer says she is putting it all in there even though some say it is usually not a good tactic to accuse the visa officers of lying. We have proof to prove everything they said was untrue, but they tried to make my husband look so stupid with their phony answers that we likely won't get ADR because they will say they have to talk to my husband to make sure he is not that stupid. (They said they asked him if he would marry me if I wasn't Canadian and he said "I just want to join her". Then they said they asked him if that was his answer and he didn't say anything. My husband speaks perfect English and what idiot would go to a spousal immigration interview and not know enough to say yes to that question. All of their questions were like this - it really looks like they were just trying to be spiteful).