Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Citizenships Being Granted Without All Checks Being Carried Out: Auditor

The Canadian Press, 03 May, 2016 12:42 PM
    OTTAWA — People with serious criminal records and others using potentially phoney addresses are among those who managed to secure Canadian citizenship, thanks to a system that doesn't do enough to root out fraud, the auditor general has found.
     
    Michael Ferguson's audit of citizenship applications between July 2014 and last fall found the Immigration Department has granted citizenships based on incomplete information or without all the necessary checks because it's not applying its own methods to combat fraud.
     
    The issue isn't the department's alone — the auditor general found they weren't getting timely or enough information from border officials or the RCMP either to help flag suspect cases.
     
    "This finding matters because ineligible individuals may obtain Canadian citizenship and receive benefits to which they are not entitled," Ferguson wrote in his spring report, tabled Tuesday in the House of Commons.  
     
    "Revoking citizenship that should not have been granted takes significant time and money." 
     
    The problems range from immigration officials not routinely checking travel documents against a database of known fake papers to a failure by officers or their computers to flag problematic addresses that could point to residency fraud..
     
    In one instance, it took seven years for official to cotton on to the fact a single address had been used by at least 50 different applicants during overlapping time periods. Of the 50, seven became Canadian citizens.
     
    A review of 49 cases where an individual's address had been flagged as problematic concluded that in 18 instances, citizenship officials didn't follow up to see if the applicant actually met residency requirements.
     
     
    In four cases, the RCMP failed to tell the Immigration Department about criminal charges laid against people who'd already passed the criminal records check step of the citizenship process. Two eventually became citizens; a third failed the knowledge test while the fourth abandoned their application.
     
    The auditor general also found four people who should have been ineligible because of their criminal records, but were granted citizenship even though the officers had access to the information.
     
    It was not immediately clear Tuesday whether any of the red flags raised by the auditor general's office have resulted in new fraud investigations.
     
    In response to the audit, the Immigration Department, Canada Border Services Agency and the RCMP all say they are working to improve their efforts and a better system should be in place by the end of this year.
     
    Tuesday's collection of audits also flagged problems at the start of many people's path to citizenship — the Immigration and Refugee Board, which handles asylum claims.
     
    As part of a review of appointments to government tribunals, the auditor general found ongoing and lengthy vacancies at the IRB, as well as at the so-called specific claims tribunal, which handles decisions on First Nations claims against the Crown.
     
     
    In both cases, the vacancies are contributing to delays in tribunal decisions — at the IRB, 21 positions are vacant, leading to wait times of an average of 18 months, up from the last study of the appointments process in 2009.
     
    When it comes to filling vacancies, the auditor general flagged the fact that for part-time positions, there was no evidence of a selection process or an assessment of candidates against required qualifications.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued Against Vancouver's Adam Ferreira In Random Stabbing At Eton Street

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued Against Vancouver's Adam Ferreira In Random Stabbing At Eton Street
    Ferreira is white, six feet tall and weighs 170 to 180 pounds. He has brown eyes, brown hair, and a tattoo of a dragon on his right upper arm.

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued Against Vancouver's Adam Ferreira In Random Stabbing At Eton Street

    90-Year-Old Vernon, B.C., Man Wins $5 Million Lottery Prize

    90-Year-Old Vernon, B.C., Man Wins $5 Million Lottery Prize
    The 90-year-old says he was so excited about the win that he was only able to sleep for two hours before claiming his prize Thursday.

    90-Year-Old Vernon, B.C., Man Wins $5 Million Lottery Prize

    B.C. Prisoners Get Addiction Therapy After Settlement In Charter Challenge

    B.C. Prisoners Get Addiction Therapy After Settlement In Charter Challenge
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's corrections system has implemented a new policy to ensure prisoners with opiate addictions can access the same treatment as patients outside provincial jails.

    B.C. Prisoners Get Addiction Therapy After Settlement In Charter Challenge

    Premier Christy Clark Announces $23 Million Funding For Police And Prosecutors To Fight Gangs

    Premier Christy Clark Announces $23 Million Funding For Police And Prosecutors To Fight Gangs
    She says gangsters are just like cockroaches who will simply escape tough enforcement in one area and go elsewhere.

    Premier Christy Clark Announces $23 Million Funding For Police And Prosecutors To Fight Gangs

    Safe City Project Underway In Surrey

    Safe City Project Underway In Surrey
      Surrey RCMP is undertaking a project dubbed as Safe City, which aims to educate firearms owners on current laws surrounding the registration requirements for restricted and prohibited firearms.

    Safe City Project Underway In Surrey

    One Year Later: RCMP Continue To Investigate Murder-Suicide In Saskatchewan

    One Year Later: RCMP Continue To Investigate Murder-Suicide In Saskatchewan
    Police say the investigation into the deaths is almost complete, but the public won't be learning more about what happened.

    One Year Later: RCMP Continue To Investigate Murder-Suicide In Saskatchewan