Windsor Star

Snafu to blame for ban from U.S., senior believes

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO A Canadian retiree says he’s been left with no choice other than to sell his house in Florida after being banned from the United States for what he believes was a long-buried bureaucrat­ic snafu.

Mike Quinn, 70, of Niagara Falls, Ont., has spent the past two years trying to figure out why U.S. authoritie­s dredged up a 15-year-old document as evidence he had once claimed to be a U.S. citizen.

“If I can’t get this resolved in the next six months, I’m getting out of the States. Sell everything,” Quinn said. “I’m not asking for forgivenes­s. I didn’t do anything.”

The profession­al engineer spent 16 years working in the United States, although he always considered the Ontario border town home. He left the U.S. in 2008 but frequently visited or shopped there using his long-held Nexus trusted traveller card to get across the border.

Quinn estimates he crossed the border more than 100 times — including to spend time at the house he bought in Port Lucie, Fla., in 2010 — without any major problems.

Things, however, changed in November 2014. American agents held him at the border for five hours. They claimed he had falsified his Nexus applicatio­n by giving his marital status as single. Quinn denied the accusation, and told them he had never been married. The officers took his Nexus card.

He spent months trying to get it back — or at least to get an explanatio­n from either the Americans or Canadians — to no avail.

In April 2015, U.S. border agents again stopped him at the Peace Bridge. They accused him of having once claimed to have been a U.S. citizen. He denied having done so. Brushing off their warnings that he could be arrested or jailed for making a false declaratio­n, he went on his way.

Several months later, he was again detained at the bridge.

“They took me in the backroom and basically put me through the meat grinder,” he said. “They pulled out this redacted registrati­on form.”

Records show the border officer produced a voter-registrati­on form Quinn had signed in February 2000 — something he said he had completely forgotten about. After questionin­g him, the agent handed him a form to sign admitting to having made a false citizenshi­p declaratio­n with the intention of receiving a benefit: the right to vote.

The official refused his request to speak to a lawyer or judge and said he would be barred forever if he didn’t sign, Quinn said.

“My head was pounding,” Quinn said. “I had no idea what was going on.”

He signed. The agent declared him inadmissib­le to the U.S. and sent him back to Canada.

In retrospect, Quinn said, he recalled going into a Florida county office to renew his driver’s licence in February 2000, but was told first to sign a voter-registrati­on form that showed him as a U.S. citizen.

He wonders whether the error might have been a bureaucrat­ic slip when authoritie­s issued him his Social Security Number.

Quinn said he advised the counter clerk of the mistake but she told him she could not renew his licence unless he signed the voter form and that she would have her supervisor fix the error. He signed — he said he realizes now that was a bad idea — and promptly forgot about it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada