Court
upholds revocation of citizenship for applicant who didn’t declare pending
criminal charges. The Federal Court upheld the revocation of Canadian
citizenship where the applicant failed to disclose pending criminal charges
while his citizenship application was being processed. The Court confirmed that
citizenship obtained through misrepresentation may be revoked even where the
individual later expresses remorse, claims language barriers, or argues
confusion about their obligations.
Key
Principle
The
decision confirms that citizenship applicants bear the responsibility to
disclose material information affecting eligibility. Limited language
proficiency, misunderstanding, or failure to seek clarification will not excuse
a material misrepresentation where the applicant had opportunities to
understand and comply with their obligations.
Background
Minh
Kinh Vo became a permanent resident of Canada in 1989. While his citizenship
application was pending, he was charged with several criminal offences,
including assault, break and enter, and possession of burglary tools. Despite
being subject to criminal proceedings, he signed his oath of citizenship
declaration stating that he was not involved in any criminal proceedings and
subsequently obtained Canadian citizenship in 2006.
Years
later, IRCC initiated citizenship revocation proceedings on the basis that he
had concealed material information. The applicant acknowledged that he failed
to disclose the charges but argued that his limited English proficiency, lack
of education, confusion regarding the citizenship process, and subsequent
remorse should justify special relief from revocation.
Court
Findings
The
Federal Court found the revocation decision reasonable. The Court held that the
applicant had a legal obligation to disclose his pending criminal charges
because, under the Citizenship Act, an individual charged with an
indictable offence is prohibited from obtaining citizenship. The undisclosed
charges were therefore material to his eligibility.
The
Court rejected the argument that confusion or limited English proficiency
excused the misrepresentation. Relying on previous jurisprudence, the Court
emphasized that individuals who sign legal documents without seeking
clarification cannot later rely on self-imposed ignorance as a defence. The
applicant knew he was participating in an important legal process and had a
responsibility to understand the declarations he was making or obtain
assistance if necessary.
The
Court also found that the officer reasonably considered the applicant’s
personal circumstances, including his health issues, caregiving
responsibilities, business interests, remorse, and establishment in Canada.
While those factors were acknowledged, the officer concluded they did not
outweigh the seriousness of the misrepresentation. The Court found that
conclusion to be justified and transparent.
In
addition, the Court rejected allegations of procedural unfairness. The
applicant had multiple opportunities to provide written submissions and there
were no significant credibility disputes requiring an oral hearing. The Court
concluded that he knew the case he had to meet and was given a meaningful
opportunity to respond.
Outcome
The
Federal Court dismissed the judicial review and upheld the revocation of the
applicant’s Canadian citizenship.
Case Citation: Vo v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2026 FC 687 (CanLII)





