1. Your problem will not be applying for citizenship, DUI is now considered serious criminality and you could be reported and removed from Canada.I am convicted over.80. Cc320.14(1)(b) Am I eligible to apply for canadian citizenship?
Hi
1. Your problem will not be applying for citizenship, DUI is now considered serious criminality and you could be reported and removed from Canada.
2. If your offence was indictable, you won't be eligible to apply for citizenship for 4 years.
You have been convicted of an indictable offence in Canada or an offence under the Citizenship Act in the last 4 years
In general, a person is not eligible to become a Canadian citizen if they were convicted of an indictable offence in Canada or any offence under the Citizenship Act in the last four years. You may want to wait and check your eligibility to apply for citizenship when four years have passed since your date of conviction. Remember that any time you spent serving a term of imprisonment, on parole, or on probation cannot count towards physical presence for the purposes of becoming a Canadian citizen. This may impact the date you may be eligible to apply for citizenship.
DUI is a hybrid offence. IRCC views all hybrid offences as indictable.Hi. My offence was a summary offnece. Its not indictable offence.
The crown dropped the charged of impaired driving which is indictable offence. They just charged me alcohol over.80 which is summary offence.Hi. My offence was a summary offnece. Its not indictable offence.
The crown dropped the charged of impaired driving which is indictable offence. Theyjust charged me alcohol over.80 which is summary offence.DUI is a hybrid offence. IRCC views all hybrid offences as indictable.
As long as you remain on probation you will be prohibited from citizenship eligibility.The crown dropped the charged of impaired driving which is indictable offence. Theyjust charged me alcohol over.80 which is summary offence.
As long as you remain on probation you will be prohibited from citizenship eligibility.
That is still a hybrid offence, meaning IRCC views it as indictable.The crown dropped the charged of impaired driving which is indictable offence. They just charged me alcohol over.80 which is summary offence.
So you should be OK.I dont have probation. The judge didnt give me probationAs long as you remain on probation you will be prohibited from citizenship eligibility.
The details matter.Thankyou so much for the answers! As far as I know my lawyer told me that my sentence is summary offence. Its not indictable offence. However, I was shocked when he told me that because I know it is a indictable offence. Im still confused.
The judge gave me a fine of 1000$ fine and 1 year driving suspension. No probation. I just dont see in my court paper that it is summary conviction. Its my lawyer told me that my case is a summary conviction, so I dont have a problem with the immigration he said. Which I believe him. I dont see why he would lie to me right?The details matter.
I am not familiar enough with Canadian criminal law to begin sorting out how it works in specific cases.
The reason I mentioned that a prohibition continues while the person is on probation (even if the conviction itself for a summarily prosecuted hybrid offence does not constitute a prohibition) is that it is my impression that any of the impaired driving convictions ordinarily result in some period of probation. But you are not the first to report here that there was no probation, so apparently that happens.
These kinds of cases appear to still be rather casually prosecuted in Canada compared to the U.S. and some European countries. Which can lead to confusion. The level of confusion also appears to be sometimes aggravated by less than fully honest descriptions given to clients by lawyers (especially public defender type lawyers), who may be encouraging a plea by the defendant and thus minimizing some of the wrinkles.
BUT all that said, if there is NO probation for sure, and the lawyer says the conviction is for a summary offence, and for example you were never presented with an indictment, the odds are high that it was indeed prosecuted summarily.
Thus, if prosecuted summarily, and there is a final disposition, a conviction, as such, and there is no term of incarceration or probation, that means:
-- it is not a conviction for an "indictable offence" under Section 22(2) in the Citizenship Act, and thus does not constitute a prohibition, EVEN THOUGH
-- the same conviction would be considered an "indictable offence" for purposes of Section 36(1) and 36(2) in IRPA, which would make a Foreign National inadmissible (subject to rehabilitation provisions)
BUT again, what matters, what makes a difference, is what your specific court record shows.
Also Note:
It is very likely there is, nonetheless, a criminal record which will pop up when IRCC processes your Citizenship application. So it may be prudent to disclose the charge and in the explanation box describe the outcome even though it is not a prohibition. Just the initial charge is something which appears to trigger a finger print request and may result in some additional non-routine processing, thus taking a little longer than routinely processed applications. But so long as there is a final disposition (if anything is still pending, WAIT to get all resolved before applying for citizenship), even though it is a conviction for a hybrid offence, and so long as it was actually prosecuted summarily and you are NOT on probation, you should be OK.
If you have any doubts at all, BEFORE making a citizenship application pay for a CONSULTATION with a competent, reputable IMMIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP lawyer and bring ALL your paperwork.The judge gave me a fine of 1000$ fine and 1 year driving suspension. No probation. I just dont see in my court paper that it is summary conviction. Its my lawyer told me that my case is a summary conviction, so I dont have a problem with the immigration he said. Which I believe him. I dont see why he would lie to me right?