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2 answers

Probably not. The arrest will normally be visible to immigration officials. A restriction on travel is pretty standard while charges are pending. As such, a person waiting trial would normally be in violation of the law to travel and such immigration would prohibit entry.

I say probably not instead of a blanket no for two reasons:
1. The immigration officer may not discover the pending charge for one reason or another.
2. Under special circumstances people that would normally not be allowed entry are allowed. I do not have an example or even a great reason, I just know a process does exist for exceptions.

2007-11-01 04:44:14 · answer #1 · answered by davidmi711 7 · 0 0

Please don't. We have enough low lifes here already.

2007-11-01 11:41:37 · answer #2 · answered by thor_torkenson 5 · 0 1

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