Saskatoon-Tree said:
Sometimes, I get my hopes as high as the sky. Some other times, I feel overwhelmed and confused.
Look at the true story given by canadianwoman above. Her friend entred US illegally and stayed there illegally. Then entered Canada illegally and lived here illegally. He was arrested, convicted in Canada and then deported. His 1st Cnd wife refused to sponsor him. He got married to the second Cnd wife, and who knows if he was already married before both Cnds. He was successful without even an appeal. This is where and how I feel hope then feel the system can be full of loopholes
If you read carefully, it was stated he was caught and then
deported from Canada. He would have been excluded for 2 years. After that he could apply for a return to Canada... he obtained PR after legally entering the second time (I am presuming)
not whilst he was here illegally.
The facts are that your husband
1) entered the country at a point other than a border crossing OR entered Canada using false or forged ID.
2) he did not apply for a visa even though he requires one to enter Canada
3) he did not inform a Border Services agent that he was applying for refugee status.
4) he didn't inform the BSA that he was here to get married.
He is here not by overstaying his visitor permit or similar ... he crossed the border, used forged or fake ID and is here ILLEGALLY. Taking that into consideration it is highly unlikely that he is going to be granted PR. Not just on the terms of his illegal entry, but on the lack of evidence of your committed relationship - getting married within a month of meeting is going to raise alarms.
You must ascertain how he entered the country and if he used fake ID to do so.
I wouldn't hold out any hope of a loophole. Hundreds of genuine, applicants with legal status are refused every year...
Rather than wait for him to be arrested, far better for him to turn himself in to a Border Service department and post a surety bond guaranteeing he will leave.