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Date: 20120921

Docket: IMM-7561-12

Citation: 2012 FC 1104

[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]

Ottawa, Ontario, September 21, 2012

PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Shore

 

BETWEEN:

 

NONA CEPEDA PEREZ

 

 

 

Applicant

 

and

 

 

 

THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP

AND IMMIGRATION

AND

THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY

AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS

 

 

 

Respondents

 

 

 

 

 

           REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER

 

[1]               The Court has before it a motion for a stay of removal to the Dominican Republic issued against the applicant. The removal is scheduled for Friday, September 21, 2012 (the day after the hearing of the application). The applicant has been aware of this removal order for two months, since July 19, 2012; therefore, this is a last-minute application.

 

[2]               After allegedly being the victim of conjugal violence, the applicant left her country in 2005 for the United States, where she lived and worked illegally until 2008.

 

[3]               The motion before the Court is incidental to an application for leave and judicial review of a negative Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA).

 

[4]               Previously, the Refugee Protection Division had determined that claim for refugee protection was not credible, given the omissions, contradictions and lack of corroborating evidence, combined with conduct that was inconsistent with a subjective fear.

 

[5]               The Court is certainly aware of the fact that new evidence was submitted to it by the applicant to corroborate her story, which the RPD had previously found not to be credible. Nonetheless, with the passage of time, seven years, since the violent incidents that had been described to the RPD, the trajectory of the claimant’s life places the applicant before a new reality.

 

[6]               Her three boys, raised in her country by her brother, are now 14 (two twins) and 15 years old respectively. The Court further notes the fact that the abusive ex-husband is in a relationship with another woman and is in another home with other children he has had with this second spouse; and, all of this having occurred within the last seven years, it alters the applicant’s circumstances. Therefore, even if this new evidence were to be taken into consideration, the applicant would still fail to satisfy any of the three conjunctive criteria of the test in Toth v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1988), 86 NR 302 (FCA) for a stay to be granted.

 

[7]               For all these reasons, the Court dismisses the applicant’s application for a stay.

 


ORDER

 

THE COURT ORDERS the dismissal of the applicant’s application for a stay.

 

« Michel M.J. Shore »

Judge

 

 

 

 

Certified true translation

Sebastian Desbarats, Translator

 


FEDERAL COURT

 

SOLICITORS OF RECORD

 

 

DOCKET:                                         IMM-7561-12

 

STYLE OF CAUSE:                        NONA CEPEDA PEREZ v THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION AND THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS

 

 

 

MOTION HEARD BY CONFERENCE CALL ON SEPTEMBER 20, 2012, BETWEEN OTTAWA, ONTARIO, AND MONTRÉAL, QUEBEC:                   

 

REASONS FOR ORDER

AND ORDER:                                  SHORE J.

 

DATED:                                            September 21, 2012

 

 

 

WRITTEN AND ORAL SUBMISSIONS BY:

 

Claude Brodeur

 

FOR THE APPLICANT

 

Suzanne Trudel

FOR THE RESPONDENTS

 

SOLICITORS OF RECORD:

 

Claude Brodeur

Counsel

Montréal, Quebec

 

FOR THE APPLICANT

 

 

Myles J. Kirvan

Deputy Attorney General of Canada

Montréal, Quebec

FOR THE RESPONDENTS

 

 

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