Pubdate: Fri, 24 Dec 2010 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Gerry Bellett FAMILY SEETHING AFTER `NIGHTMARE' EXPERIENCE AT SUMAS CROSSING VANCOUVER - It was supposed to be the Christmas road trip of a lifetime, a chance for two stepsisters to bond while driving the 2,400 kilometres from the small town of Pekin, Ill., to Abbotsford. Brittany Davis, 22, an American citizen, was coming to visit her father for Christmas accompanied by her Canadian stepsister Crystal Stewart, 20. And it was all going well, until they rolled up to the Sumas border crossing at 6 p.m. on Dec. 12. "What happened then was a nightmare," said Crystal's mom, Tina Stewart, who has filed a complaint with the Canada Border Services Agency about the girls' alleged treatment. CBSA official Jennifer Bourque said Thursday that the complaint would be investigated. "We take all allegations of misconduct seriously and thoroughly investigate every complaint by a member of the travelling public," said Bourque. However, she said privacy legislation prohibits the agency from commenting on the incident at this time. According to the family, officers brought the stepsisters inside for questioning after suspecting they had marijuana in the car. The women were allegedly told they would be arrested unless they confessed where the drugs were being hidden. Brittany said she told the officers there were no drugs in her car. "I gave them the keys and willingly let them search the car," said Brittany, who added she had previously visited Canada five times without problems. Tina and her husband Jim Stewart - Brittany's father - became aware of their plight when one of the officers who had seized Crystal's cellphone accidentally dialed Tina's number. Tina said she could overhear the conversation between the officers. "They were saying they could smell cigarette smoke in the car and because it smelt funny they were convinced it was marijuana," said Tina. She said her stepdaughter had been smoking cigarettes in the car. "American cigarettes might smell different [than] Canadian cigarettes, I suppose. But when I heard that I went, `Oh my God, we had better go down there.' These are two really good kids; they've never been in any trouble in their lives," she said. "We are a law-abiding family and nobody in our family has any sort of criminal record. Brittany is a wonderful young woman and I could furnish countless character references for her from both sides of the border." When the Stewarts arrived at the border at 7:30 p.m., they found the two women in tears. "They were told the police were on their way, and were being told: 'Why don't you save us time by telling us where the drugs are,'" recalled Tina. "They kept telling them there were no drugs hidden in the car and all that seemed to do was make them angry. "But when we got there the whole drug thing was dropped. The two girls were scared to death and had been crying their eyes out." Tina said the officers then changed tack and began harassing her stepdaughter for attempting to move into the country illegally. In October, Brittany had applied for permanent residence status in Canada to be closer to her father. "They saw this on the computer and said because of the amount of possessions she had in her car they believed she was attempting to move into the country illegally," said Tina. "They were focusing on a body pillow she had and [were] saying, 'Why would she bring this?' and that she wouldn't bring a thing like that if she was flying to Mexico on holiday, which is true. But she was driving a car and was planning to stay with us for a couple of months," said her stepmother. "In the end they kind of set us up. They told us it would be best if Jim took Crystal home, but Brittany should drive back into the United States, turn around and come back, and the chances were pretty good she'd be allowed in," said Tina. So Tina and Brittany followed their advice, stopping first at the U.S. border crossing to explain why Brittany had been refused entry into Canada. When they drove up to the Canadian border crossing, the same group of officers was waiting for them. "This time it was even worse. It was a nightmare trying to deal with them. They were going on about the permanent residency application and, `Why would she be coming now?' and we're saying, `Because it's Christmas and she wants to be with her father,' " Tina said. It went on for hours, until past midnight, when the officer interrogating Brittany wrote a report recommending she be refused entry and banned from entering Canada for a year. Tina said his supervisor decided to amend this and gave her permission to stay in Canada until Jan. 31 but made the family post a $2,000 bond. "We are appealing this. Brittany did nothing wrong," said her stepmother. Meanwhile, Brittany and her family are afraid that all this might affect her application for permanent residency. If she is served with an exclusion order Jan. 31, and banned from entering Canada for a year, she fears her application will be rejected. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt