Interesting People mailing list archives

governmental datamining: Going to Canada? Check your past


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Sat, 24 Feb 2007 14:18:51 -0500



Begin forwarded message:

From: Jeff.Hodges () KingsMountain com
Date: February 23, 2007 2:27:31 PM EST
To: dave () farber net
Cc: Jeff.Hodges () KingsMountain com
Subject: governmental datamining: Going to Canada? Check your past

for IP if you wish.

=JeffH


http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/02/23/ MNGCAO9NSB1.DTL&type
=printable



Going to Canada? Check your past
Tourists with minor criminal records turned back at border

C.W. Nevius

Friday, February 23, 2007

There was a time not long ago when a trip across the border from the United
States to Canada was accomplished with a wink and a wave of a driver's
license. Those days are over.

Take the case of 55-year-old Lake Tahoe resident Greg Felsch. Stopped at the border in Vancouver this month at the start of a planned five-day ski trip, he was sent back to the United States because of a DUI conviction seven years ago. Not that he had any idea what was going on when he was told at customs:
"Your next stop is immigration.''

Felsch was ushered into a room. "There must have been 75 people in line," he says. "We were there for three hours. One woman was in tears. A guy was sent back for having a medical marijuana card. I felt like a felon with an ankle
bracelet.''

Or ask the well-to-do East Bay couple who flew to British Columbia this month for an eight-day ski vacation at the famed Whistler Chateau, where rooms run to $500 a night. They'd made the trip many times, but were surprised at the
border to be told that the husband would have to report to "secondary''
immigration.

There, in a room he estimates was filled with 60 other concerned travelers, he was told he was "a person who was inadmissible to Canada.'' The problem? A
conviction for marijuana possession.

In 1975.

Welcome to the new world of border security. Unsuspecting Americans are
turning up at the Canadian border expecting clear sailing, only to find that
their past -- sometimes their distant past -- is suddenly an issue.

<snip/>





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