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My Husband Ran away after 2 Month in Canada

jasleenkhalsa

Newbie
Dec 27, 2020
5
0
36
Surrey
Category........
FSW
Visa Office......
New Delhi
Hello everyone can some one help me, I have spent more than 40-45 K on my Husband, when he got visa some how , he did not even spent 10 days and he left to his school girlfriend who is currently living in Langley BC, is there any way I can deport him.

I have contacted many immigration firms in Surrey. They even took money from me
Like Access West Immigration, CMC Immigration and Visa Link in Surrey.

I want to tech my husband a lesson.

Please help me
 

Miss bee

VIP Member
Mar 24, 2020
4,917
1,627
Hello everyone can some one help me, I have spent more than 40-45 K on my Husband, when he got visa some how , he did not even spent 10 days and he left to his school girlfriend who is currently living in Langley BC, is there any way I can deport him.

I have contacted many immigration firms in Surrey. They even took money from me
Like Access West Immigration, CMC Immigration and Visa Link in Surrey.

I want to tech my husband a lesson.

Please help me
No
You can’t do
Anything right now unless you have solid proof that this marriage was only for obtaining pr in Canada. You can certainly submit proof to CBSA . Not sure if they will do anything.
 
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Mdnawab

Star Member
Nov 19, 2017
197
178
Hello everyone can some one help me, I have spent more than 40-45 K on my Husband, when he got visa some how , he did not even spent 10 days and he left to his school girlfriend who is currently living in Langley BC, is there any way I can deport him.

I have contacted many immigration firms in Surrey. They even took money from me
Like Access West Immigration, CMC Immigration and Visa Link in Surrey.

I want to tech my husband a lesson.

Please help me
You can try. Contact CBSA and IRCC. Provide them with as much proof as you can gather and show them he only married you to gain PR and he has no intention of living with you.

one of my friends husband did this as well. My friend contacted a lawyer and they submitted some documents and proof to IRCC, his partner was summoned by IRCC. Not sure what happened after that. But you can try.

This is exactly why NDVO takes months and months to finalize spousal applications. Just because few people do this type of fraud entire country’s applicants suffer and go through long and rigorous process to make sure visa fraud does not happen yet it still happens.

I think you can deport him, if you have enough proof. I have seen a couple of cases myself.

Anyway good luck. And hopefully you teach him a lesson.
 

canuck78

VIP Member
Jun 18, 2017
55,430
13,458
Would include proof that he landed and only remained with you for 10 days before leaving. Would include the amount of days you have actually spent together in person after marriage. If you can prove that he reunited with a woman who he had dated before and if you can find proof that they never stopped their relationship/communicating that would be helpful. You can only provide your evidence to CBSA and they'll decide if they want to pursue the issue. Unless there is very blatant evidence that this was a marriage of convenience then it is unlikely to be pursued.
 
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Phalos

Champion Member
Jun 19, 2020
2,564
1,291
You can try. Contact CBSA and IRCC. Provide them with as much proof as you can gather and show them he only married you to gain PR and he has no intention of living with you.

one of my friends husband did this as well. My friend contacted a lawyer and they submitted some documents and proof to IRCC, his partner was summoned by IRCC. Not sure what happened after that. But you can try.

This is exactly why NDVO takes months and months to finalize spousal applications. Just because few people do this type of fraud entire country’s applicants suffer and go through long and rigorous process to make sure visa fraud does not happen yet it still happens.

I think you can deport him, if you have enough proof. I have seen a couple of cases myself.

Anyway good luck. And hopefully you teach him a lesson.
Better so not to report it, as it will be WORSE for future applicants.
 

Phalos

Champion Member
Jun 19, 2020
2,564
1,291
Hello everyone can some one help me, I have spent more than 40-45 K on my Husband, when he got visa some how , he did not even spent 10 days and he left to his school girlfriend who is currently living in Langley BC, is there any way I can deport him.

I have contacted many immigration firms in Surrey. They even took money from me
Like Access West Immigration, CMC Immigration and Visa Link in Surrey.

I want to tech my husband a lesson.

Please help me
Did you have Roka, big wedding, reception and honeymoon with lots of photo proof and communication evidence?
 

scylla

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Miss bee

VIP Member
Mar 24, 2020
4,917
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With respect, I see that as terrible advice.

If what the OP says (and which I see no reason to doubt) is true, this man is an immigration fraudster pure and simple. So, because the CBSA might investigate and find that to be the case, it should not be reported? You would appear to be saying that it is better for the law to be broken in the occasional case, and ignored, for the greater good? I find that unacceptable. Maybe just me. And I am new here and not wholly familiar with the morality of those who spend a lot of time on this site.

Leave us not forget, this woman has probably signed an undertaking to be financially responsible for him for some time. Should she continue to hold herself at risk of being called upon to perform? And should this worthless "husband" be allowed to get away with a significant misdeed, which discredits all legitimate applicants, and be free to brag to others about how be beat the system, thus encouraging others to be equally dishonest? And, whether he boast about it or not, it will be readily apparent to many that he played the system and won, thus tacitly encouraging more of the same behaviour. How can that fairly be said to assist "future applicants".
Absolutely true.
 

jasleenkhalsa

Newbie
Dec 27, 2020
5
0
36
Surrey
Category........
FSW
Visa Office......
New Delhi
No
You can’t do
Anything right now unless you have solid proof that this marriage was only for obtaining pr in Canada. You can certainly submit proof to CBSA . Not sure if they will do anything.
Just to back up for a moment, you mentioned your husband got a visa "some how". What does that mean? You don't know how he got a visa? You are posting under Family Sponsorship and the logical inference would be, given your words as well as the topic, that you sponsored him here as a spouse. Is that the case?

As well, you say he "ran away after 2 month in Canada" and you also say he was with you for less than 10 days. So where was he for most of that 2-month time period? You also say he's now in Langley. Where are you living?

As an aside, out of curiosity, do you have a sister presently involved in immigrating to Canada? I ask only because, in a contemporaneous post to another thread, you mention her receiving a call for an interview. Seems you have a lot going on at the same time.
he got visa after 3 interviews, they had lot of doubts about him .The reason i said 10 days, means he lived in a same room as mine for 10 days, and most of time he was with his old girlfriend which i never knew, but one of friend told me about both them, live in surrey, its a long story will let you know once ill deal with my problem and what i mean with 2 months is he took his bag and stuff and gone, and gave me so many warnings, that if i do complaints about him my parents in India may suffer the consequences
 

armoured

VIP Member
Feb 1, 2015
17,140
8,792
With respect, I see that as terrible advice.

If what the OP says (and which I see no reason to doubt) is true, this man is an immigration fraudster pure and simple. So, because the CBSA might investigate and find that to be the case, it should not be reported? You would appear to be saying that it is better for the law to be broken in the occasional case, and ignored, for the greater good. I find that unacceptable. Maybe just me. I am new here and not wholly familiar with the morality of those who spend a lot of time on this site.

Leave us not forget, this woman has probably signed an undertaking to be financially responsible for him for some time. Should she continue to hold herself at risk of being called upon to perform? And should this worthless "husband" be allowed to get away with a significant misdeed, which discredits all legitimate applicants, and be free to brag to others about how be beat the system, thus encouraging others to be equally dishonest? And, whether he boasts about it or not, it will be readily apparent to many that he played the system and won, thus tacitly encouraging more of the same behaviour. How can that fairly be said to assist "future applicants"?
I fully agree with your points above. Only a minor point: we frequently see here posters in such a situation - or much less clearcut, in that it may just be a domestic difference - that really want to punish the offender.

That's understandable. But most of the time, the most basic and best advice is: yes, report them to Immigration Canada by providing the information you have that the other person committed immigraiton fraud (which, I underline, is distinct from and much narrower than personal offences, betrayal, infidelity, etc).

After that, it's mostly out of the individual's hands. In most cases, the best they can do is protect themselves (legally), get divorced, and move on - and mostly forget about punishment. IRCC will pursue fraud cases acc to its own methods and analysis and policies - which will not coincide with the wishes of the offended party.
 

Mdnawab

Star Member
Nov 19, 2017
197
178
Just to back up for a moment, you mentioned your husband got a visa "some how". What does that mean? You don't know how he got a visa? You are posting under Family Sponsorship and the logical inference would be, given your words as well as the topic, that you sponsored him here as a spouse. Is that the case?

As well, you say he "ran away after 2 month in Canada" and you also say he was with you for less than 10 days. So where was he for most of that 2-month time period? You also say he's now in Langley. Where are you living?

As an aside, out of curiosity, do you have a sister presently involved in immigrating to Canada? I ask only because, in a contemporaneous post to another thread, you mention her receiving a call for an interview. Seems you have a lot going on at the same time.

just what I was thinking. Either we are not getting the whole story or something is very fishy on both sides. I might be wrong though.
 
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