Horrible treatment by Canadian Customs/Immigration (CBSA) at YVR
Mods, feel free to move this if it belongs in Travel Safety/Security or Canada.
So here's the background. I wanted to go to Alaska for my birthday and I've been wanting to fly Cathay Pacific for a long time. I decided to combine the two and booked a JFK-YVR flight on CX in First and then bought an Alaska ticket from YVR-SEA-ANC. When I arrived at YVR I explained this to the first agent I saw and he wrote some numbers on my customs declaration that indicated I was to be sent to secondary screening. Here is where the "fun" started. Never in my life have I been made to feel more like a criminal. I have friends who have been arrested who were treated better. I explained what I was doing and showed my Alaska E-Ticket reservation to a female agent who promptly requested a supervisor. I was then told "empty your pockets and step away from the table". The two of them looked through all the pictures in my camera, then turned on my cell phone and proceeded to read through my emails and texts and scroll through the photos therein. Meanwhile, I was asked over and over again what drugs I took and what I'd been arrested for. The more I said "none and nothing", the more I said "I'm going to Alaska for fun" the more condescending and accusatory they became. They saw I had an entry stamp from SDQ on 9/1 and an exit on 9/3 and told me "I've never heard of anyone staying only two days, why were you REALLY there?". They didn't believe that I'd gone because "it's there". They asked how much money I made and then chose to run a criminal background check on me. The whole ordeal took over 45 minutes and what upset me the most was I HAD DONE NOTHING WRONG. The more I explained why I was there, the less they believed me. I almost wanted to start lying so hopefully they'd believe me and let me go. When I asked what they expected to find in my phone they snapped "the Customs Act allows us to look through your phone so be quiet". |
While this doesnt justify the CBSA, I take it you never entered the USA as a foreigner and undergone interrogation. It makes your story sound like a visit to a country club.
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I can't remember the layout of YVR very well, so don't remember if there is an "international terminal" or just the general terminals. Were you just in transit in a sterile area to connect to an international flight, or did you try to leave the airport, thereby entering the country?
I've had both very good and very bad experiences there, it may just depend on the mood of the person you get. |
Originally Posted by rankourabu
(Post 19612056)
While this doesnt justify the CBSA, I take it you never entered the USA as a foreigner and undergone interrogation. It makes your story sound like a visit to a country club.
Would the US really read the texts and emails of people? I know to do that to a US citizen they'd need a warrant.
Originally Posted by CDTraveler
(Post 19612129)
I can't remember the layout of YVR very well, so don't remember if there is an "international terminal" or just the general terminals. Were you just in transit in a sterile area to connect to an international flight, or did you try to leave the airport, thereby entering the country?
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Originally Posted by CMK10
(Post 19612225)
Would the US really read the texts and emails of people? I know to do that to a US citizen they'd need a warrant.
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Why not complain? - I have done so entering the US (as a US citizen).
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Originally Posted by CMK10
(Post 19612225)
Would the US really read the texts and emails of people? I know to do that to a US citizen they'd need a warrant.
And dont even try to enter with stamps with squiggly writing in your passport. Luckily Global Entry eliminated the constant harassment from USCBP. |
Originally Posted by PresRDC
(Post 19612336)
No, they don't.
I guess clearly I've been sheltered, i thought this was an awful, invasive, unfair experience but I guess it's commonplace :( |
[QUOTE=CMK10;19612493
I guess clearly I've been sheltered, i thought this was an awful, invasive, unfair experience but I guess it's commonplace :([/QUOTE] Yes, it happens all the time to "foreigners" entering the US. |
Originally Posted by celle
(Post 19612563)
Yes, it happens all the time to "foreigners" entering the US.
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Never Should Have Happened...
Dear CM,
Why (being the ultra elite road warrior that you are) do you NOT have NEXUS and/or Global Entry??? You could have TOTALLY avoided this situation! |
Originally Posted by I_Can_Fly_US_Airways
(Post 19612617)
Dear CM,
Why (being the ultra elite road warrior that you are) do you NOT have NEXUS and/or Global Entry??? You could have TOTALLY avoided this situation! |
Originally Posted by CMK10
(Post 19612643)
Because I'm cheap, period. I only travel out of the country twice a year (this was my first time in Canada in 60 some odd months). I'd rather have the $100 or whatever in my pocket and not have to go to the interviews and deal with this, than avoid it and spend the money. For a once to twice a year international traveler who doesn't make all that much money, Nexus and Global Entry don't make all that much sense.
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Originally Posted by CMK10
(Post 19612493)
Really? I asked my parents who are lawyers and they seemed to think they did. The fact that they don't scares me.
I guess clearly I've been sheltered, i thought this was an awful, invasive, unfair experience but I guess it's commonplace :( Typically, they target single male travelers returning from countries known for child sex tourism or employees of defense companies looking for ITAR violations. |
Originally Posted by CMK10
(Post 19612006)
They saw I had an entry stamp from SDQ on 9/1 and an exit on 9/3 and told me "I've never heard of anyone staying only two days, why were you REALLY there?".
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