Made with Love

Man who has lived in Montreal since childhood faces deportation.

Stubby

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 20, 2011
Messages
566
Should he be deported or not?. Do you believe he is an evangelical Christian or is it another one of his lies.
 
Morales had 18 guilty pleas between 1994 and 2004, with convictions for drunk driving, break-and-enter, theft, and possessing and selling small amounts of cocaine.

Where the immigration people sleeping :shock:

What took them so long. Clearly he is not good to our society.

Bye Bye Morales.
 
No, Canadian society contributed to him going astray more than Chile did. He served his time, let's see him prove he's now straight with new found Christian morals.
 
Auggie - I'm a poon hound - what did my country do to contribute to that?

After 18 chances.... sorry the "I've changed" defense doesn't work.

 
Short-hairless said:
Auggie - I'm a poon hound - what did my country do to contribute to that?

We're all affected by the culture around us in various ways.
 
Auggie said:
We're all affected by the culture around us in various ways.

Agreed but what about Canada makes you a 18 time repeat offender?
 
What about his early childhood in Chile made him an 18 time repeat offender?
 
Wasn't being in Chile that caused it it was the 2 years in Argentina. I'm sure of it. Argentinians are evil people. Like Fins. Ask any Russian.
 
Two key things in this case:

"I'm a Canadian citizen, I'm a Quebecois, I'm a (permanent) resident who lost his status because of his criminal past," Morales told reporters at the federal courthouse.

and

He has received letters of support for his case from his ex-wife, his former sister-in-law, and from others including the addiction counsellor who supervised his alcohol-treatment program.

He was a permanant resident but chose to flaunt the life he was given here and the priviledge of living here was taken away. I guess he should have thought about deportation before becoming a criminal?

The second part: I wouldn't put too much stock in those letters of support, his ex-wife wants him here working so he can pay child support and alimony I bet.

I don't think the length of time he's been in Canada should have any bearing whatsoever on whether he can stay or not. If you do take that into consideration that is simply saying if you break the law long enough, you should be exempted from paying the penalty. Kind of reminds me of an old timer who was caught in the US not long ago. He escaped prison when he was 28 and was caught when he was....60?

Whether or not he has turned over a new leaf is irrelevant. His residency status was revoked due to his criminal activities and he chose to flaunt the law and stay here.

If nothing else he should be put on double secret probation and if he even gets so much as a speeding ticket, kick his ass out.
 
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