Canada minister in pizza scandal

Beowulf

Golden Member
Jan 27, 2001
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Canada minister in pizza scandal
Canada's immigration minister Judy Sgro has resigned over allegations that she agreed to help a pizza shop owner avoid deportation in return for free food.
Harjit Singh says he delivered free pizza and garlic bread to Ms Sgro and up to 16 election campaign volunteers.

He says Ms Sgro reneged on the deal and ordered his arrest to "save her job" as another immigration scandal broke.

Ms Sgro says she had no alternative but to resign in order to fight "these outrageous fabrications".

Her resignation comes as a blow to the ruling Liberal party, which lost its parliamentary majority in June elections after a scandal over the misuse of millions of dollars of government funds.

Prime Minister Paul Martin said he accepted Ms Sgro's resignation with "great regret".

'Pizza, garlic bread etc.'

Mr Singh - a father of three who came to Canada in 1988 - is currently in detention awaiting deportation fraud charges next week.

In an affidavit, he says he went to see the minister in the run-up to general elections in June last year.

"I told her my whole situation and she assured me that if I helped out in her election campaign she would get me immigration in Canada," says the affidavit, quoted by the Toronto Star newspaper.

"I own a pizza store in Brampton and Judy said that she wanted me to deliver pizza, garlic bread etc., to her campaign office in North York. I did this," he said.

Mr Singh says Ms Sgro began to distance herself from the agreement when one of her volunteer election campaign workers threatened to reveal it, the Toronto Star reported.

"I believe that now to save her job Judy Sgro is using her power to remove me from Canada," the paper quotes Mr Singh as saying in the affidavit.

Mr Singh says the deal began to unravel at about the time Ms Sgro was facing separate allegations that she arranged a temporary residency permit for a Romanian stripper also working on her campaign team.

Ms Sgro has vehemently denies the alleged arrangement or even ever speaking to Mr Singh.

"It is unfortunate that these outrageous fabrications have interfered with my vision and desire to modernise this portfolio," she said in a statement.

"Let there be no doubt that I will be fighting these allegations vigorously with every measure at my disposal and will remove all doubt about my conduct."

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr...i/americas/4178339.stm
 

Stunt

Diamond Member
Jul 17, 2002
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Been here since 1988 and a pizza shop owner?...jeez let the poor guy stay.

Especially considering he has 3 kids who have probably become accustomed to the Canadian lifestyle.
His kids should have citizenship for being born here...if that is the case.
 

sandorski

No Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
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Ms Sgro's troubles get even worse. She is also involved in at least one other situation where an Immigrant claims she used the Immigrant as a Campaign worker then turned around and reneged on a promise to grant Landed Immigrant status to that person. I think she's in big trouble(seems to me there is a third Immigrant as well, but I'm not sure of it).
 

raildogg

Lifer
Aug 24, 2004
12,892
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Originally posted by: Stunt
Been here since 1988 and a pizza shop owner?...jeez let the poor guy stay.

Especially considering he has 3 kids who have probably become accustomed to the Canadian lifestyle.
His kids should have citizenship for being born here...if that is the case.

maybe it was a successful pizzeria?
 

Talon

Golden Member
Oct 29, 1999
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This guy and his family (who weren't born here) were supposed to have been deported long ago. Read a little more about his background.

Mr. Singh was also in trouble with the law in Canada: An Ontario Court judge ruled in a civil suit last July that he and his three adult children must repay $900,000 to Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Bank of Montreal, Bank of Nova Scotia, Royal Canadian Bank and Toronto-Dominion Bank for their involvement in a massive credit- and debit-card fraud. Mark Klaiman, Mr. Singh's lawyer, is now suing him for failing to pay the $57,000 legal bill. His client also faced criminal charges that were eventually dropped.

Text
 

Stunt

Diamond Member
Jul 17, 2002
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Originally posted by: raildogg
Originally posted by: Stunt
Been here since 1988 and a pizza shop owner?...jeez let the poor guy stay.

Especially considering he has 3 kids who have probably become accustomed to the Canadian lifestyle.
His kids should have citizenship for being born here...if that is the case.

maybe it was a successful pizzeria?
And that is a reason to deport because?
 

sandorski

No Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
70,629
6,191
126
Originally posted by: Talon
This guy and his family (who weren't born here) were supposed to have been deported long ago. Read a little more about his background.

Mr. Singh was also in trouble with the law in Canada: An Ontario Court judge ruled in a civil suit last July that he and his three adult children must repay $900,000 to Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Bank of Montreal, Bank of Nova Scotia, Royal Canadian Bank and Toronto-Dominion Bank for their involvement in a massive credit- and debit-card fraud. Mark Klaiman, Mr. Singh's lawyer, is now suing him for failing to pay the $57,000 legal bill. His client also faced criminal charges that were eventually dropped.

Text

Hmm, the plot thickens.