Anonymous wrote:This is 100% true. I am a recently retired travel agency owner and I know of passengers boarding ships (headed to Alaska) in Seattle (which was making one port stop in Canada) and they were denied boarding because Canadian immigration gets the manifest a few days before the ship sails and they will instruct the cruise line to not allow the person to board. You need to read up on it.
https://www.canadavisa.com/entering-canada-with-a-dui-conviction.html
Anonymous wrote: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.
Canada and Australia.
Anonymous wrote:
European here. I have a great deal of difficulty believing any of this is true.
Can anyone post a link?
There are millions of people with DUI convictions or their own national equivalents in all countries with biometric passport requirements. I really don't think Canada, or France or some other country, is pulling people off planes just for some measly DUI.
Anonymous wrote: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.
No, they can't release you back into the terminal on good faith that you wouldn't leave. You aren't arrested, but you are detained until the first available flight to your destination. However, if you were a US citizen flying from the US to Paris and your plane diverted to Canada for some odd reason, you'd get detained and most likely put on the first plane going back to the US not to Paris since flights to the US happen more frequently than to Paris.
Anonymous wrote:This is exactly what happened to those Israeli kids in Tehran (the series). Much higher stakes, admittedly. But same concept.
Those of you being dismissive of this concern are liable to end up face down in the toilet in some third world prison one day. Keep your head on a swivel.
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.