According to law clerk, Olga Sattarova JD, whose article is cited below: "If you have a trial under way, or there is a warrant for your arrest, or you have charges pending against you, you are considered criminally inadmissible. If you have been convicted of minor offenses (including assault, dangerous driving, DUI, theft, shoplifting, unauthorized possession of firearms, possession of illegal substances, etc.) or indictable criminal offenses (including assault with a deadly weapon, manslaughter, etc.) you prohibited from. Further action is required to find out whether you will be allowed entrance."
it all depends on your record,how long ago,what for.i know nothing about your details.i am a felon,was able to obtain a passport,with help from a lawyer. call a lawyer,it might not be a big problem,and it's better to know in advance,than to arrive in the u/k and they send you home on the next Canadian bound flight. maybe all you need to obtain is a certificate of rehabilitation,to show you are reformed.
Yes, you can travel to Canada with a UK police caution. However, you cannot travel to Canada if you have been charged with a felony in the UK.
A caution will be cleared of your recored when you are sixteen if you got arrested when you were about 12-13 but if you get arrested until you will have a perminant criminal recored
because the plane is going the other way around earth which is longer than going from UK to Canada that from Canada to UK
You can enter into Canada for a period of 6 months. It will be especially easy for you since you are a UK citizen and you have family living in Canada. Just make sure you have a return ticket to the UK upon entery to Canada or the immigration officer may give you a bit of trouble..also have your sisters address and phone number handy. What I want to know is if you are a UK citizen who has stayed in Canada for 6 months and must leave..Can you get a ticket and reenter Canada the same week and stay for another 6 months? Hope someone has the answer to that question!!
Information about Canada Life UK online can be found on the Canada Life website. There is a link on the main page redirects to the UK site where there is plenty of information about Canada Life UK.
Yes, you can travel to Canada with a UK police caution. However, you cannot travel to Canada if you have been charged with a felony in the UK.
No- it is impossible to enter the legal profession if you have any criminal record at all in the UK, even if the conviction is spent. It is also very difficult to enter medicine if you have a criminal conviction, though in the latter case it is not impossible if there were mitigating circumstances at the time the offence took place.
ENTRY to the US would be doubtful with a criminal record, especially if the crimes are felonies.
In order to have a criminal record spent in the UK, a number of years must pass. It depends on the crimes you were charged with.
In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the age of criminal responsibility (and therefore the age at which you can get a criminal record) is 10. In Scotland, the age of criminal responsibility is 8.
In the UK, driving offences only form part of your criminal record if you received a caution or conviction for the offence. Fixed penalty fines and speed awareness courses are not part of your official criminal record.
The police and intelligence service of USA, Canada, the UK, New Zealand and Australia are linked together and share the same data base. If the crime was serious enough that your record is put up electronically in their system, then you'll have problems.
No. However certain offences are classed as 'spent' after a period of time.
Soon i hope but seeing as he as a criminal record he might never be able to ;(
Unlike credit records and driving records, criminal records are permanent. If you are committed of a crime, the conviction never "comes off" your record.
In the UK you cannot do a check of your own criminal record, the governments website gov recommends that you do a basic check via disclosure Scotland should you need just a basic disclosure.
If it was after September 2004, then it will last forever as it is classed as a "recordable offence".