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Marriage to Cuban leaves Brampton bride brokenhearted and broke

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betplom

*plommer*
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http://www.thestar.com/news/immigra...s_brampton_bride_brokenhearted_and_broke.html

Erin Standen says the man she met in April 2010 vanished three days after finally joining her in Canada — an all-too-familiar story for Border Services.

After Erin Standen married the man of her dreams a year ago, she showered him and his family in Cuba with love — and gifts.

In June, while waiting for the spousal sponsorship to come through in Havana, the 28-year-old Brampton single mother began renovating her basement apartment for their new life.

She ripped out the carpet, installed tile floors, bought a 47-inch big-screen TV and put in a $4,000 bedroom set, anticipating his arrival.

On Jan. 12, the long wait was finally over and Jorge Manuel Batista Gonzalez, 33, arrived at Pearson International Airport, embraced by an exhilarated Standen.

Three days later, Standen says, Gonzalez — after kissing her goodbye as she left for her waitressing job — walked out the door with all the clothes and other things she had bought for him, along with $1,000 tip money she had collected in the bedroom.




Close to 99% of Cubans that marry Canadians usually leave the relationship within a few months.

This is well known yet there are still idiots that become victims.
(There are forums dedicated to the topic)

Plommer knows Cubans belong in Cuba, bringing one back to Canada is always a bad idea.
 
Best shit-eating grin ever.

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I'm sorry but :lmao:
 
You can't do it that way here Plom.

You have a 2 year renewal of your residency where if you are not still married you have to have a really good reason why or you are gone.

The immigration rules have changed in Canada recently too, spouses must live with their partner for a minimum of 2 years during which the sponsoring spouse may cancel his/her sponsorship. The broad in the story was married before the new law took effect.

The law became necessary because the number of foreign spouses brought to Canada (from certain countries) were abandoning their partners at an astronomically high rate (over 90%). It was common.
Canadians were outraged and demanded action by the government.

Cubans scamming Canadians is nothing new. They are masters of marriage fraud.

In 2008 I worked with a guy who was going to marry a Cuban broad, I knew what was going to happen and it did, but it wasn't my place to say anything, he was just another truck driver I worked with.

Live and learn.