mattiMom
May 20, 2012, 01:22 PM
I just have a quick question regarding my husband and crossing the border. We applied for our passports and were looking at information online about what we could buy and the rules for crossing when my husband came across a section about not bothering to cross if you've been arrested/convicted of a crime.
My husband was never actually convicted, nor was he guilty of his crime, and I'll describe the situation. Basically he was working at a convenience store about 8 years ago, and on camera was seen putting a piece of paper into his pocket which was a coupon for a car wash (one that has zero value and employees were allowed to take) but the manager of the store called the police because they started saying he stole a $20 Fido card (this place had a lot of theft problems from other employees, and my husband ended up being the fall for things he wasn't doing) which was not true, he never had it on him, never used any Fido card, and didn't have a use for it since he didn't even have a cell phone. The police did take him down to the police station (not in handcuffs though I don't think that matters), was photographed and fingerprinted, received a paper with a court date, but after that, nothing. He doesn't remember what went on because his parents hired a lawyer who said he'd "take care of everything" - and asking them, they reply "don't worry about it", and I'm thinking because it was so long ago, they don't really remember the details.
My question is, even though there was no court date, there was no settlement (he just got fired, wrongfully I might add) there was no conviction and there was no diversion program, he never paid fines, he never made a plea, but all the charges were dropped, will the fact that he was fingerprinted and photographed and gave the police information stop him from crossing the border? Even if he was wrongfully accused and never went to court? Also, we live in Quebec, not sure if the Province matters here or not.
Thanks for any replies.
My husband was never actually convicted, nor was he guilty of his crime, and I'll describe the situation. Basically he was working at a convenience store about 8 years ago, and on camera was seen putting a piece of paper into his pocket which was a coupon for a car wash (one that has zero value and employees were allowed to take) but the manager of the store called the police because they started saying he stole a $20 Fido card (this place had a lot of theft problems from other employees, and my husband ended up being the fall for things he wasn't doing) which was not true, he never had it on him, never used any Fido card, and didn't have a use for it since he didn't even have a cell phone. The police did take him down to the police station (not in handcuffs though I don't think that matters), was photographed and fingerprinted, received a paper with a court date, but after that, nothing. He doesn't remember what went on because his parents hired a lawyer who said he'd "take care of everything" - and asking them, they reply "don't worry about it", and I'm thinking because it was so long ago, they don't really remember the details.
My question is, even though there was no court date, there was no settlement (he just got fired, wrongfully I might add) there was no conviction and there was no diversion program, he never paid fines, he never made a plea, but all the charges were dropped, will the fact that he was fingerprinted and photographed and gave the police information stop him from crossing the border? Even if he was wrongfully accused and never went to court? Also, we live in Quebec, not sure if the Province matters here or not.
Thanks for any replies.