Borderlines
#217 - Duress and Criminal Inadmissibility: A Major Federal Court of Appeal Decision
- Author: Vários
- Narrator: Vários
- Publisher: Podcast
- Duration: 0:51:09
- More information
Informações:
Synopsis
We break down a major new Federal Court of Appeal decision on criminal inadmissibility, duress, and refugee protection in Canadian immigration law. The case is Rodriguez Anzola v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration).The discussion explores whether individuals convicted abroad can still seek protection in Canada when the underlying criminal conduct occurred under coercion, threats, or fear for their lives. Topics discussed include:how criminal equivalency works in Canadian immigration law;the role of duress in inadmissibility proceedings;the Federal Court of Appeal’s comments on fairness, humanitarian principles, and public safety; growing judicial pushback against overly broad interpretations of inadmissibility law;organized crime, IRGC-related arguments, and security inadmissibility;unusual foreign convictions that have triggered inadmissibility findings in Canada; andbroader concerns about proportionality, plea bargains, and moral culpability in immigration law.The episode also includes audience questions