Dubious defaults
Sherwood Motel trial documents show lack of follow-up for several applicants
New documents released in connection with the Sherwood Motel trial reveal that provincial staff made minimal efforts to track several provincial nominee program applicants but absorbed tens of thousands of dollars of “good faith” deposits from these applicants.
Hundreds of pages of documents were released to The Guardian following the stay of charges against Ping and Yi Zhong, two siblings who own the Sherwood Motel. The documents include information related to seven PNP applicants, all Chinese nationals, who listed the Sherwood Motel as an address upon arrival in Canada. All seven had already been approved for permanent residency under P.E.I.’s PNP prior to arrival. All landed on P.E.I. between April 2010 and August 2012.
Island Investment Development Inc., which administers the province’s immigration programs, issued letters to the legal representative of the seven applicants, one year after their arrival on P.E.I., stating their good faith deposit of $25,000 would be forfeited to the province. IIDI absorbed the good faith deposit of all seven PNP applicants, citing lack of evidence of residency in P.E.I. Three others also had their $20,000 language deposit, which required applicants to demonstrate English-language proficiency, forfeited to the province.
For six of the seven applicants, an email was sent to Chris Somers of the Halifax-based Canadian International Capital, an immigration consultant who acted on their behalf, with the exact same wording.
“Please note that this client has never been into our office for a landing therefore, we do not have contact information on file,” the email read.
Five of the seven applicants had signed a landing declaration bearing the logo of IIDI on it, shortly after arriving on P.E.I. These letters were signed by an IIDI program officer.
Two of the PNP applicants had submitted a form, which bore the IIDI letterhead, which authorized one of the Zhong siblings to pick up their language deposit cheques. These forms included a forwarding address for the applicant – one in Richmond Hill, Ont., and one in Markham, Ont.
IIDI collected over $47 million between 2013 and 2018 in PNPrelated defaults. The province announced in September it would be discontinuing the business stream components of the PNP, which required good faith and escrow deposits from business stream immigrants, because of low retention rates.
The Zhong siblings were charged with several counts of aiding or abetting misrepresentation under the federal Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, in relation to alleged falsification of P.E.I. addresses of these seven PNP applicants.
Defence lawyers for the Zhongs argued that the Sherwood Motel was listed as an address because new immigrants often did not have a permanent address upon arrival.