Sorry, there is very little good news to offer here. I can understand the pain and frustration, the feeling of dreams being crushed.
Choices have consequences. It would be easy to lecture about individual responsibility, personal accountability, and the need to do one's homework. It would be easy to chastise and repeat admonitions to understand what one is signing before signing. And so on. But as you are experiencing, such lessons are too often learned after the damage has been done.
I cannot offer much hope in a Canadian future for you, if (as it appears) you are not currently living in and present in Canada. My condolences. This is indeed a great country, and I am indeed profoundly grateful that Canada has allowed me to come here, stay here, make this my home, my country. Thus, I have a deep appreciation for your loss. Again, sorry I cannot offer much hope.
Best I can offer is some further insight into the what and why.
Nisso said:
I feel so bad about my situation , I want to ask about my 14 years old son, he can't renew his PR card ? Is there any way that he could renew his PR card?
You have not been clear about whether you are in Canada now or outside Canada.
Even as to your own PR status, this could make a huge difference.
If you are in Canada, see a lawyer before you do anything with IRCC or CBSA. Make no application for a new PR card for example. But, again if you are in Canada, there is a chance that all that happens is the citizenship application is terminated, nothing more, nothing worse. And then, if and when you are in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation, and IRCC or the RCMP have not commenced any proceedings against you related to misrepresentations, you will be eligible to apply for and be issued new PR cards . . . I would wait as long as practical before doing this,
let-the-dust-settle one might say.
In contrast, if you are outside Canada and do not have currently valid PR cards, and you have not spent at least two years out of the last five years in Canada, there is very little chance of saving your PR status. Very, very little.
The situation might be different for your minor child. When the child reaches the age of majority, the child may make an application for a PR Travel Document and submit proof of H&C reasons for why the child should be allowed to retain PR status despite not complying with the PR Residency Obligation. For many, perhaps most PRs who became a PR as a minor child and was removed from Canada while a dependent child, and who seek to return to live in Canada relatively soon after reaching the age of majority, Canada allows them a chance to come to Canada to live, to retain their PR status and settle in Canada.
HOWEVER, there is no guarantee of this, none at all, and the risk of a negative outcome in this situation increases if the child has minimal ties to Canada, and especially so if the child has little history of actually living in Canada.
So, whether or not there is a chance, or much of a chance, for your child to retain PR status, probably depends on a number of particular factors. How much time the child has lived in Canada is one important factor. Any other ties to Canada is another.
PR card:
Retaining PR status is not dependent on getting a new PR card. And, getting a new PR card does not necessarily guarantee that one can retain PR status.
Your child's status, for example, does not depend on applying for or obtaining a new PR card.
If your child is in Canada, the child's PR status is probably OK and going to be OK
so long as you did NOT make any misrepresentations in the original application for PR status. Child should still wait until meeting the PR RO, which means not traveling outside Canada and not making a PR card application until the child has been in Canada two out of the preceding five years. If the child is in Canada and has been in Canada for more than two years out of the last five, the child should be able to get a new PR card.
If your child is outside Canada and does not have a current PR card, the child will need to apply for and obtain a PR Travel Document. I discussed this process above.
If you contact a lawyer and the lawyer's advice is to apply for new PR cards, you probably want to find another lawyer.
If you have been living in Canada for at least two plus years in the last five, and are currently in Canada, OK, maybe go that route, maybe apply soon for a PR card.
My impression is this is not your situation.
Nisso said:
And I want to ask again , if the government gave license to this consultant , and he told us he is authorized from the government , where is my mistake here when I trusted him? The government must help the victims of fraud and give them another chance by watching them all the way , not to punish them because they trusted an authorized consultant .
Canada is not going to reward you for being a participant in a fraudulent scheme, even if you were fraudulently induced into participating.
You are not eligible for citizenship. Even if Canada was willing to totally ignore the fact that a fraud was being committed, you still did not meet the residency requirement.
Additionally, it appears you are an inadmissible PR because you have not met the PR Residency Obligation. Here too, even if Canada was willing to totally overlook that a fraud was being perpetrated, if you have not been living in Canada for at least two of the last five years, you failed to meet the PR Residency Obligation.
But, Canada is not at all likely to overlook your role in the fraud.
You either signed documents containing what you knew was false information, or you knowingly allowed someone to sign those documents on your behalf, either knowing they contained false information or at the very least failing to verify the truthfulness of that information.
The signature in those documents, the application and residency calculation, your signature or a signature authorized by you,
verifies the truthfulness of what is in the documents. The information was not truthful. The information was relevant and material. This meets the definition of a material misrepresentation on all points.
And you attended an interview, answered questions, and while you have not discussed the details of that interview, at the very least you had to have affirmed the information about living in Canada, information which was not true, otherwise you would not have been scheduled to attend the oath. There is no doubt about your personal participation in the scheme.
Regardless what the consultant or lawyer said to you or promised you, the odds are high if not overwhelming the Canadian government will conclude you willingly and knowingly engaged in making material misrepresentations. And, frankly, that is very much what just about any reasonable decision-maker would conclude.
Thus, yes, there is a risk you could be punished if you are in or come to Canada. More than a few in a situation similar to yours have indeed been prosecuted and convicted of a criminal offense, and thus fined and even incarcerated for a time.
That noted, there is a good chance you will NOT be punished.
We do not know the actual numbers, but my guess is that most are not prosecuted for a criminal offense, and thus are not punished.
As noted above, though, even if the government ignores the fraud, you clearly did not qualify for citizenship and thus cannot be granted citizenship.
Denying citizenship is not punishment. If you did not qualify for citizenship, the government is not going to grant you citizenship anyway. In fact, the government
cannot legally grant citizenship if you did not meet the qualifications for a grant of citizenship. Even if you were defrauded by a Citizenship Officer and a Citizenship Judge, promised citizenship and paid money, that would not authorize the government to grant you citizenship.
Similarly in regards to retaining PR status. If you did not comply with the PR Residency Obligation, loss of PR status is not punishment. It is merely the loss of a status because of the failure to meet the conditions for retaining that status.
There is the potential for some punishment short of criminal prosecution, depending on what misrepresentations were made, and when, in particular transactions with CIC, CBSA, or IRCC. A two or five year ban from coming to Canada may be imposed, for example, if you made a material misrepresentation in certain contexts, depending on the date that happened.
But denying citizenship or losing PR status are not considered to be punishment, particularly when based on the fact the individual did not meet the qualifications.
Nisso said:
Nobody pushed me to lie , as an authorized consultant from the government I trusted him , and he is the one that should not let us sign on something false or wrong and he told us that no need to read anything , and that he did this for so many people and it goes very well with them , he is the one that should not let us to do things wrong because we trusted him , and in everywhere in the world when you trust your consultant that means that he should do things right not wrong . So he is the one that you should blame not us because I have every email from him as a proof of what I am saying .
I think they should give us another chance and this time we will do it right and live and settle in Canada . Thank you
At this stage, who to blame is the least significant aspect of your situation.
And if you are in Canada, or somehow can come to Canada, or perhaps even from abroad, you could pursue a cause of action in fraud against the consultant (recognizing, however, that by now the consultant has no real resources from which any recovery of damages might come). You are right, the consultant should not have helped let alone encouraged you to make an application containing false information. That is why he was prosecuted. And you could personally sue him as well.
However, your last post tends to indicate you are not quite recognizing the nature or extent of your personal accountability. For example, while the consultant undoubtedly did you wrong, and you most likely have a civil cause of action against the consultant, there is a very real likelihood (if such a lawsuit were made and pursued, even though, again, the consultant probably has no money from which compensation could be taken) a court or jury will see your participation equally culpable, or nearly so, or at least that you do not have, as they say,
clean-hands.
Big clue: it is really, really hard to convince the government, a reasonable person, or almost any stranger, that it was reasonable to trust someone, anyone, who says it is OK to lie to the government. Even if that someone was a government official.
In this scenario, many might believe you genuinely felt it was OK to trust the consultant that the lies could and would be gotten away with. That is a different deal. Not one which helps your cause.