Anonymous wrote:They will not let you in. You will need to turn around and go home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re fine. It was 2003. I believe they consider you rehabilitated after 10 years. At the 5 year point after your sentence is complete (so whatever probation/jail time), you can apply to get a rehabilitation waiver to cross into Canada. Anything more recent and you’re SOL.
Canadian border agents do have access to these records though!!
Yes, this! A little more info - OP you are not banned from Canada for life. More than 10 years have passed and you can enter Canada just as you would had you never got convicted. You don’t need to apply for any waiver because your dui was prior to 2018.
If it was in 2018 or beyond, you’d have to apply for the waiver even when 10 years have passed.
So go to Canada! The Canadian Rockies have some of the most beautiful scenery in the world!
NP
Nope. Wrong.
Unless OP applies for the TRP and receives it ($350 each app, btw) it IS a lifetime ban on entry.
The US is the only first world nation that lets people with criminal records stroll unchecked across its border. Canada doesn’t put up with that stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re fine. It was 2003. I believe they consider you rehabilitated after 10 years. At the 5 year point after your sentence is complete (so whatever probation/jail time), you can apply to get a rehabilitation waiver to cross into Canada. Anything more recent and you’re SOL.
Canadian border agents do have access to these records though!!
Yes, this! A little more info - OP you are not banned from Canada for life. More than 10 years have passed and you can enter Canada just as you would had you never got convicted. You don’t need to apply for any waiver because your dui was prior to 2018.
If it was in 2018 or beyond, you’d have to apply for the waiver even when 10 years have passed.
So go to Canada! The Canadian Rockies have some of the most beautiful scenery in the world!
Anonymous wrote:You’re fine. It was 2003. I believe they consider you rehabilitated after 10 years. At the 5 year point after your sentence is complete (so whatever probation/jail time), you can apply to get a rehabilitation waiver to cross into Canada. Anything more recent and you’re SOL.
Canadian border agents do have access to these records though!!
Anonymous wrote:I have literally never heard this.
When you show a passport at immigration they don’t check for criminal history unless you’re actually wanted or on an Interpol list.
Anonymous wrote:This is such marginal worry that I wouldn't worry about it -- they might not let you enter Canada so you'd have to stay in the terminal. You are not under a Canadian order for arrest. And I doubt that there was no one with a DUI conviction on a plane on 9/11 and I'm pretty sure they put no one in the pokey.
Anonymous wrote:As long as you don’t leave and go through customs you’re fine.