IRB Policy Grants Serious Offenders Deportation Delays

New IRB Policy Gifts Serious Offenders Endless Deportation Delays

Foreign criminals are celebrating today.

Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board has quietly unleashed a bombshell policy that hands convicted killers, rapists, and drug lords a powerful new weapon to dodge deportation indefinitely.

The controversial directive, buried in bureaucratic paperwork, effectively ties the hands of immigration judges and gifts serious offenders endless delays.

Legal experts are warning the move will keep dangerous predators on Canadian streets for years.

Justice System in Chaos

The new policy forces the IRB to grant automatic stays of deportation for any foreign national who claims their home country might mistreat them.

Even convicted murderers can now stall removal proceedings with a simple human rights claim.

Sources inside the board have described the situation as “complete madness.”

“We’re being told to prioritize feelings over public safety,” one insider revealed.

The directive comes as Canada faces a growing backlog of deportation cases.

Official figures show more than 15,000 foreign criminals currently await removal.

This policy could see that number explode.

Victims’ Families Outraged

Sarah Thompson’s brother was killed by a drunk driver who was in Canada illegally.

She watched in horror as his deportation was delayed for three years.

“Now they want to make it even easier for these people to stay?” she demanded.

“It’s a slap in the face to every victim in this country.”

The policy shift has sparked fury among victims’ rights groups.

They accuse the government of putting criminal rights ahead of public safety.

Government Defends Move

Immigration Minister Marc Miller’s office insists the policy respects international law.

A spokesperson claimed the directive merely clarifies existing procedures.

But leaked internal documents tell a different story.

The new rules explicitly instruct board members to “err on the side of caution” when foreign criminals claim risk.

Translation: grant the stay first, ask questions later.

Paying the Price

Canadian taxpayers will foot the bill.

Each delayed deportation costs an average of $54,000 in legal aid, housing, and health care.

Multiply that by thousands of cases.

The numbers are staggering.

Meanwhile, deportation officers report feeling demoralized and powerless.

“Why bother doing the investigation if the board just lets them stay anyway?” one officer asked.

Dangerous Precedent

Immigration lawyers are already coaching clients on how to exploit the system.

Seminars advertised online promise “guaranteed stays” for convicted felons.

The IRB declined to comment on the record.

But sources confirm the board has been swamped with new applications since the policy took effect.

One senior official privately admitted: “We’ve opened Pandora’s box.”

The consequences could be deadly.

Canadians deserve better.


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