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Foreign Charges, Written Admissions, and Criminal Inadmissibility: What Cruz v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) Means

When Canadian immigration officers look at criminal allegations from another country, they cannot simply say, “this looks bad” and stop there. They have to do the legal work of showing how the foreign conduct matches a Canadian offence.

That is exactly what the Federal Court dealt with in Cruz v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2020 FC 455.

This case is important because it shows that even where there is a written admission and serious allegations from abroad, an immigration officer still has to carry out a proper equivalency analysis before finding someone criminally inadmissible to Canada.

What happened in Cruz?

Christopher Bacani Cruz was a Filipino national who came to Canada in 2008 as a temporary worker. In 2013, he applied for permanent residence through the provincial nominee class. He listed his wife and two children as non-accompanying dependants.

His wife was facing charges in the Philippines for “Estafa through Falsification of Commercial Documents.” The allegation was that, while working at a rural bank between 2004 and 2005, she accepted client deposits but did not remit them to the bank. Instead, the money was allegedly used for her own personal benefit. The total amount involved was approximately CDN $28,000.

The immigration record included a handwritten document signed by Mr. Cruz’s wife in which she acknowledged responsibility for the deposits, stated that the money was not received by the bank, and admitted she used it for personal reasons.

A migration officer concluded that these acts would be equivalent in Canada to misappropriation of money held under direction under section 332(1) of the Criminal Code. On that basis, the officer found Mr. Cruz’s wife criminally inadmissible under section 36(1)(c) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, and because she was inadmissible, Mr. Cruz was also found inadmissible under section 42(1)(a) as a family member of an inadmissible person.

What did the officer decide?

The officer treated the wife’s written admission as conclusive proof that she had committed the offence. The GCMS notes show the officer took the position that even if the Philippine charges were eventually settled, the fact remained that she had committed the acts in question.

The officer also concluded that the foreign conduct, if committed in Canada, would amount to an offence punishable by up to ten years, which would place the matter under serious criminality.

What arguments did Mr. Cruz make?

Mr. Cruz challenged the refusal in Federal Court. He argued, among other things, that:

        the officer failed to do a proper equivalency analysis between the Philippine offence and the Canadian offence;

        the officer should have considered humanitarian and compassionate grounds;

        the officer should have considered criminal rehabilitation; and

        the officer had fettered discretion.

In the end, the Court focused mainly on whether the officer’s finding of inadmissibility was reasonable.

What the Court accepted — and what it rejected

Justice Strickland did not accept every argument raised by the applicant.

For example, the Court held that the officer did not have to independently raise humanitarian and compassionate relief where no proper request under section 25 of IRPA had been made. Mr. Cruz’s email asking for “a chance” and saying the application was his family’s “bread and butter” was not enough to amount to a formal H&C request.

The Court also rejected the argument that the officer had to invite the wife to apply for criminal rehabilitation. Because no rehabilitation application had actually been made, and because the wife did not fall within the deemed rehabilitation provisions, the officer was under no duty to consider rehabilitation on her behalf.

So the case was not won on H&C or rehabilitation.

Where the officer went wrong

The real problem, according to the Court, was the equivalency analysis.

The Court accepted that the officer had evidence to work with. This was not a case where the officer relied only on rumours or bare police allegations. There was a written admission, and there were supporting documents from the Philippine proceedings.

But that still was not enough.

The officer said the Philippine offence was equivalent to section 332(1) of the Criminal Code, but did not actually identify the essential elements of that Canadian offence or explain how the wife’s admitted conduct met those elements.

That mattered because section 36(1)(c) requires more than just a general sense that the conduct was wrongful. The officer had to determine whether the act committed outside Canada would, if committed in Canada, constitute a Canadian offence punishable by a maximum term of at least ten years.

In other words, the officer had to do more than name a Canadian offence. The officer had to explain why the foreign conduct satisfied the legal ingredients of that offence.

Justice Strickland relied on earlier case law, including Pardhan, Singh, and Nshogoza, to underline that officers must either:

        compare the wording of the foreign and Canadian offences,

        examine the evidence to show the essential ingredients of the Canadian offence were established,

        or use a combination of both approaches.

Here, the officer did not do that work.

Why section 332(1) mattered

Section 332(1) of the Criminal Code deals with a specific form of theft: where a person receives money or valuable property with directions about how it is to be applied or paid, and then fraudulently diverts it elsewhere.

The Court noted that it may well have been open to the officer to conclude that the wife’s conduct fit that Canadian provision. But the problem was that the officer never actually explained the comparison.

The decision simply jumped from the facts to the conclusion.

That was not enough for the Court.

What was the result?

The Federal Court allowed the application for judicial review.

The decision was sent back for redetermination by a different migration officer.

So the Court did not say Mr. Cruz’s wife was admissible. It said the officer’s reasoning was legally inadequate because the required equivalency analysis had not been properly done.

Why this case matters

Cruz is a useful reminder that foreign criminal allegations and admissions can have serious immigration consequences, but officers still have to follow the law carefully.

Three points stand out:

First, a person can be found inadmissible under section 36(1)(c) even without a foreign conviction, if the officer concludes the person committed an act outside Canada that would amount to a serious Canadian offence.

Second, a written admission can be powerful evidence. In Cruz, the Court accepted that the officer was entitled to rely on the wife’s signed statement as evidence that she committed the acts.

Third, and most importantly, evidence alone does not replace legal analysis. If the officer is saying a foreign act is equivalent to a Canadian offence, the officer must explain the comparison properly.

That is where the decision in Cruz fell apart.

Cases like Cruz show how important it is to carefully review:

        the foreign offence or allegation,

        the wording of the foreign law,

        the possible Canadian equivalent,

        whether the legal elements actually match,

        and whether immigration officers have carried out the right analysis.

At A&M Canadian Immigration Law Corporation, we help clients deal with criminal inadmissibility issues, including situations involving foreign charges, foreign convictions, and equivalency analysis under Canadian immigration law. These cases can become technical very quickly. A careful legal review can make a real difference.
If you or a family member are dealing with criminal inadmissibility based on a foreign offence, it may be worth reviewing the case carefully before making further immigration decisions.

Source

Cruz v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2020 FC 455 

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