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ij³ª´Ù º¹±Ç½Åû ¼­·ù´Â Å©°Ô ³ª´©¾î ¡®º¹±Ç½Åû¼­¡¯, ¡®½Åûºñ ³³ºÎ¡¯, ¡®¿øº»/»çº» Áõºù¼­·ù¡¯ µîÀ» Æ÷ÇÔ ÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
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- Application for Criminal Rehabilitation (IMM 1444)
- Use of a Representative (IMM 5476) ; º¯È£»ç, ¹ý¹«»ç µîÀ» À§ÀÓÇÏ¿© ½ÅûÇÏ´Â °æ¿ì
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- Fee for Immigration Service, Approval of Rehabilitation (IMM 5310) ; ij³ª´Ù $ Money Order ȤÀº ½Å¿ëÄ«µå ÀÌ¿ë ³³ºÎ °¡´É
»çº» Áõºù¼­·ù
- Pages from your passport showing your name, date of birth, and country of birth
- For citizens of the United States only: If you do not have a passport, a copy of your driver's licence and USA birth certificate
- Each court judgement made against you which must clearly show the charge, the section of the law under which you were charged, the verdict and the sentence
- The foreign or Canadian laws under which you were charged or convicted. You can obtain copies of foreign laws by contacting local police authorities, lawyers, the courthouse where the offence occured, visiting your local law library, or searching the Internet. If you need information about another country, their local embassy or consulate may be able to help you.
- Any documents relating to sentence imposed, parole, probation or pardon; e.g. court records, judge's comments (including recommendation concerning parole), probation or parole reports, certificate of rehabilitation, letters of recommendation from public officials or respected private citizens, etc. These documents must clearly show when your sentence was completed.
¿øº» Áõºù¼­·ù
- A criminal clearance from the police authorities in all countries (including Canada) where you have lived for six consecutive months or longer since reaching the age of 18
- For people who have lived in the United States: Provide a state certificate (or a letter from a police authority) for each state in which you have lived for six consecutive months or longer since reaching the age of 18 and a national FBI certificate
- If you were a juvenile offender (see Determining inadmissibility), a letter or document proving that the country you were convicted in has special measures for juvenile offenders
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