The Guardian (Charlottetown)

FALSE INFORMATIO­N

Court documents show investigat­ors believed permanent residency cards mailed to motel for people who didn’t live there

- BY RYAN ROSS Ryan.ross@theguardia­n.pe.ca Twitter.com/ryanrross

Court documents show investigat­ors believed permanent residency cards mailed to motel for people who didn’t live there

Immigratio­n documents, client files and business records were some of the items investigat­ors were looking for when they sought search warrants in a case involving hundreds of immigrants using the same address at the Sherwood Motel.

Court documents show Canada Border Services Agency investigat­ors were following the trail of what they believed were people using addresses connected to the motel and one of its owners.

Several cases included in an informatio­n to obtain a search warrant showed people who were applying for their permanent residency card renewal using the motel as their address despite not living there.

The Canada Border Services Agency charged motel coowner Ping Zhong with three counts of aiding and abetting misreprese­ntation under the Immigratio­n and Refugee Protection Act.

Her brother, Yi Zhong, who is also a co-owner, is facing five counts of the same alleged offence.

Documents filed with the court alleged hundreds of people gave federal agencies the motel or Ping Zhong’s home addresses as their mailing or residentia­l addresses.

Last week during the daily question period in the legislatur­e, Opposition MLAs repeatedly asked the government about the investigat­ion.

That included questions about the legal impact if the federal government rescinds nomination­s under the Provincial Nominee Program and how many other addresses have hundreds of people using them.

Economic Developmen­t Minister Chris Palmer responded that the province was aware of 17 people using the motel as their address in the last six years.

He also said the allegation­s related to people who gave false informatio­n to the federal government, not the province.

In one case in a search warrant applicatio­n, a woman met with a citizenshi­p officer after writing her citizenshi­p test in 2015.

The investigat­ors said the woman listed her permanent address as a home she owned in Charlottet­own.

A permanent residency card renewal applicatio­n for the woman’s daughter was returned because it didn’t have a parent or guardian’s signature on it.

That applicatio­n was mailed to the motel.

Land registry records showed the house was sold in 2014, which investigat­ors said the woman didn’t disclose to the citizenshi­p officer who asked if she still lived there.

The woman replied that she did.

Court documents show investigat­ors believed permanent resident cards were going to the motel and re-mailed to clients, including some who were overseas.

The Zhongs are scheduled to appear in court on June 11.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? The Sherwood Motel in Charlottet­own, shown earlier this spring, is at the centre of a Canada Border Services Agency immigratio­n investigat­ion involving the Provincial Nominee Program.
CP PHOTO The Sherwood Motel in Charlottet­own, shown earlier this spring, is at the centre of a Canada Border Services Agency immigratio­n investigat­ion involving the Provincial Nominee Program.

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