screech339
VIP Member
- Apr 2, 2013
- 552
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Vegreville
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 14-08-2012
- AOR Received.
- 20-11-2012
- Med's Done....
- 18-07-2012
- Interview........
- 17-06-2013
- LANDED..........
- 17-06-2013
I agree that the OP has a right to appeal due to that fact that the hubby has not done any jail term at all. He doesn't fit the "no appeal" rules. However the appeal may still likely to keep the negative ruling due to that the convicted offense is an indictable offense in equivalently to Canada.bartjones said:Agreed, but either way, it really doesn't matter. I quoted those sections of the Act because it was suggested that the OP had no right of appeal because her husband's case fell into the "Serious Criminality" category, which it clearly does not.
Now this may be an example here. One applicant could have been charge with drunk drinking but only gotten a fine for it, no jail term. Do you think that the applicant should be able to say it is only a "minor" offence since he/she only paid a fine in his/her country in the eyes of CIC or Canada criminal law? In the eyes of the law in Canada, that is a serious offense. Do you as a CIC officer want to bring in someone who was convicted of drunk driving? This is the point I am making. The appeal may still hold up the decision due to it being a serious offense in Canada.
There are countries that have tighter drunk driving laws than us. Norway, China has 0.02% to get a conviction, whereas we have 0.05%. Does this mean we have to forsaken the conviction of china or norway because theirs is tighter than ours? A conviction is a conviction.
CIC is not going to say, oh it has a 0.02% alcohol level in the system thus doesn't apply to us since ours is at 0.08%. They will not see that. They will only see a record of driving under influence as police record thus it is an indictable offense in Canada too, thus inadmissionable.
Screech339