Old drug use or charge -
I was searched at the US border two days ago. They did not find anything but I was asked if I had ever smoked marijuana. I said yes, and mentioned that President Clinton had even smoked marijuana.
Wham!
I was treated like a criminal, fingerprinted, and banned from the United States.
I was told I had to get a waiver. What's a waiver?
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david ingram replies:
Admitting to the smoking of marijuana, the taking of Magic mushrooms, being part of an LSD experiment in the sixties are all grounds for inadmissibility to the United States.
Bill Clinton admitted to smoking Marijuana in Britain. If he had not been a US Citizen, that admission is enough to ban him from the USA for life. Most people caught in this have been to the states 50 to 100 times before it rears its ugly head.
Our BC Premier was arrested and jailed in Hawaii for Drunk Driving. If he was not a Caandian citizen, that is enough to ban him from Canada for life (without a waiver from Canada). In August 1998, We banned and refused entry to FBI Assistant Director Carmacks because he had an eight year old SUI in Georgia.
And whatever you do, don't have a blog about your old experiences or mention it in an email.
The following story from the Herald Tribune will explain the process and why and futility. Now that I have said that, I think that Mr Feldman has over-reacted. Getting a waiver is tedious and embarrassing but relatively easy to do . You do NOT need a lawyer. Just fill in the paperwork. There are organizations that can help that I mention further on. I don't do it anymore because I am too busy with tax but up to 2000, had likley helped over 100 people with their waiver applications and none were turned down that I know of.
This comes from: http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/05/14/news/legal.php
Web searches at U.S. border bring scrutiny to new level
Andrew Feldmar, a Vancouver psychotherapist, was on his way to pick up a friend at the Seattle airport last summer when he ran into a little trouble at the border.
A guard typed Feldmar's name into an Internet search engine, which revealed that he had written about using LSD in the 1960s in an interdisciplinary journal. Feldmar was turned back and is no longer welcome in the United States, where he has been active professionally and where both of his children live.
Feldmar, 66, has a distinguished résumé, no criminal record and a candid manner. Though he has not used illegal drugs since 1974, he says he has no regrets.
"It was an absolutely fascinating and life-altering experience for me," he said last week of his experimentation with LSD and other psychedelic drugs. "The insights it provided have lasted for a lifetime. It allowed me to feel what it would be like to live without habits."
Feldmar said he had been in the United States more than 100 times and always without incident since he last took an illegal drug. But that changed in August, thanks to the happenstance of an Internet search, conducted for unexplained reasons, at the Peace Arch border station in Blaine, Washington.
The search turned up an article in a 2001 issue of the journal Janus Head devoted to the legacy of R.D. Laing, with whom Feldmar had studied in London about 30 years before.
"I traveled to many regions many times with the help of many different substances," Feldmar wrote of his experiences with Laing and other psychiatrists and therapists. "I took peyote, psilocybin mushrooms, cannabis" and other drugs, he added, "but I kept coming back to LSD."
He was asked by a border guard whether he was the author of the article and whether it was true. Yes, he replied. And yes.
Feldmar was held for four hours, fingerprinted and, after signing a statement conceding the long-ago drug use, sent home.
Mike Milne, a spokesman for the Customs and Border Protection agency in Seattle, said he could not discuss individual cases for reasons of privacy. But the law is clear, Milne said. People who have used drugs are not welcome here.
"If you are or have been a drug user," he said, "that's one of the many things that can make you inadmissible to the United States."
He added that the government was constantly on the hunt for new sources of information. "Any new technology that we have available to us, we use to do searches on," Milne said.
Feldmar has been told by the American consul general in Vancouver that he may now enter the United States only if he obtains a formal waiver.
"Both our countries have very similar regulations regarding issuance of visas for citizens who have violated the law," the consul, Lewis Lukens, wrote to Feldmar in September. "The issue here is not the writing of an article, but the taking of controlled substances."
The waiver process would require a lawyer, several thousand dollars and dishonesty, Feldmar said. He would have to say he has been rehabilitated.
"Rehabilitated from what?" he asked. "It's degrading, literally degrading."
Ethan Nadelmann, the executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, which works to ease drug penalties, said Feldmar's case proved how arbitrary U.S. drug policy can be. "Roughly a majority of the population of the United States between the ages of 18 and 58 has violated a drug law at least once," he said.
Feldmar said, "I should warn people that the electronic footprint you leave on the Net will be used against you. It cannot be erased."
It is very unlikely that blind or unexpected email to me will be answered. I receive anywhere from 100 to 700 unsolicited emails a day and usually answer anywhere from 2 to 20 if they are not from existing clients. Existing clients are advised to put their 'name and PAYING CUSTOMER' in the subject line and get answered first. I also refuse to be a slave to email and do not look at it every day and have never ever looked at it when I am out of town. e bankruptcy expert US Canada Canadian American Mexican Income Tax service and help
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$1,700 would be for two people with income from two countries
Catch - up returns for the US where we use the Canadian return as a guide for seven years at a time will be from $150 to $600.00 per year depending upon numbers of bank accounts, RRSP's, existence of rental houses, self employment, etc. Note that these returns tend to be informational rather than taxable. In fact, if there are children involved, we usually get refunds of $1,000 per child per year for 3 years. We have done several catch-ups where the client has recieved as much as $6,000 back for an $1,800 bill and one recently with 6 children is resulting in over $12,000 refund.
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