These references are good sources and appreciated. And are especially instructive in regards to approaching CBSA with a request to remove alerts or flags that result in repeated referrals to Secondary.
Only caveat is that these are about immigration enforcement flags. Which will have minimal (but not necessarily zero) import for individuals after they become a Canadian citizen. Which in turn should mean, for a citizen, that the alert/flag should be removed upon reasonable request.
I am not well-informed about internal CBSA operations, and of course many aspects of their investigatory role are confidential (not public information), but in general terms travelers can be flagged for various other reasons, ranging from suspected criminal activity to security concerns, which may involve alerts derived from customs officers, RCMP or NSSD officials, or even CSIS.
It is not clear precisely what kind of alert has flagged
@Ghess23, and of course if it is law enforcement or CSIS related (rather than an immigration enforcement flag), obviously that would be confidential and border officials would not truthfully reveal why the flag or what in particular they are monitoring.
One thing is very clear, however, and that is that a Canadian citizen does NOT have the right to skip a Secondary referral attendant their application for entry into Canada.
Many express concern about the scope of powers border officials have. And there is some question about how much oversight there should be.
. . . Apart from isolated credible reports in this forum, occasionally in public media, which are to be expected in the best of circumstances, there is very little indication of systemic, systematic, or even much at all common abuse of power or discretion by CBSA officers.
You dont seem to get it . . .
There is a great deal I do not get, and I freely acknowledge this. I repeat, frequently and often with much emphasis, I am NO expert. This is no mere pro forma expression of modesty.
But I do get a few things (and try to share what I hope can be helpful). For example, I get it that CBSA has very broad discretion in exercising its extensive authority to examine international travelers applying for entry into Canada, and this allows for Secondary referrals including immigration screening at a Port-of-Entry without any need to show cause. And this applies to returning Canadian citizens as wells as other Canadians (PRs) and Foreign Nationals (FNs). That is, Canadian citizens do NOT have a right to skip immigration screening at a PoE.
I also get that in addition to those who currently have refugee status, former refugees are often (but not always) subject to more PoE screening than most other Canadians (including PRs). And that this can be due to an "
alert" (commonly referred to as a "
flag") in the client's GCMS records (and more particularly, in what populates the information that automatically pops up in the Primary Inspection Line, in what the sources referenced by
@hemeda2 refer to as IPIL, an integrated database for the PIL).
It is not possible to "
remove the association between cbsa and immigration file" as suggested by
@hemeda2, since a client's GCMS records necessarily contain any retained immigration file for that individual, and the client's GCMS records are a primary source of information employed in screening international travelers, and a source of what is included in the IPIL. But if I understand
@hemeda2 correctly, the point being made is that alerts based on immigration-related enforcement can be removed or at least have a notation that will eliminate automatic referrals to Secondary. See references posted by
@hemeda2 for more discussion about ways to go about that.
Among the many things I do not get is . . .
. . next time if they ask me to go to immigration, i will not be going . . .
But . . .
. . . 2 days ago i flew into Canada and was sent again to immigration automatically!
What happened when you refused to go to Secondary?
Or . . . maybe I do get it. As I think I have mentioned before:
Travelers referred to Secondary have no right to decline examination in Secondary, and can be detained pending resolution of any issues identified by the examining officials. And, again, this includes Canadian citizens.
You don't say so particularly, but my guess is that you did not refuse to go to Secondary, and that at the very least an officer looked at your passport and at you, so at the least verified your identity before granting your application to enter Canada.
I cannot guess what other observations about you officers made, what notations were added to your file. I can speculate that the many suggestions here about how to clear or remove the flag will probably, at least eventually, work. So it would be a good idea, if these referrals to Secondary so badly irritate you, to make the effort to follow through that way. However, this comes with a caution that if you are the subject of law enforcement or security concerns, if the RCMP, NSSD, or CSIS has put a flag on your file, it could be difficult to get it removed and even very difficult to learn who put it there, or why it is there, or what it is about you they are monitoring. I doubt this is the case, since it is more likely this is a holdover from an alert related to your status as a refugee; and since you are no longer a refugee, it is more likely an alert that should be removed upon reasonable request, and sooner or later even without request.