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June 25, 2006
Bride left broke by alien husband
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By MICHELE MANDEL
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Cindy thought she had
found her soulmate, the man of her dreams, a father to her young
daughter.
The Toronto accountant had him met over the Internet, introduced
by mutual friends. Theirs was a long distance relationship --
Eduardo lived in Cuba where he was manager of a department store --
but they spoke every day and she flew in often to visit him. When he
proposed after seven months, Cindy truly believed their love was
forever.
They married in Havana on Dec. 14, 2004. In their wedding photo,
the dark and handsome groom hugs her close as the beautiful blonde
bride beams with joy.
The 33-year-old sits alone in her East York apartment, barely
able to glance at those photos of a mirage.
She spent the next 15 months filing all the paper work to bring
her husband here. She admits to a few nagging doubts; she had heard
the horror stories of marriage scams. He assured her that those
cases involved Cubans who worked in the hotels in hopes of snaring
vulnerable Canadian tourists. He was different. He really loved her
and if she wanted, they could make a life together in Cuba.
But when Cindy actually considered that offer, Eduardo suddenly
backpedalled. Her daughter would have to attend an international
school in Havana, he said, and where would they get the expensive
tuition? His argument made sense, and so she continued to sponsor
him here, sending immigration proof of their marriage, photos of the
wedding, evidence of their daily correspondence.
Approved at last, Eduardo arrived here March 10, and was promptly
given a Canadian social insurance number, a health card and
permanent residency. Less than three months later, he was gone. |
Three weeks ago, he pulled Cindy back into bed to cuddle before she
left for work. It had not been an easy adjustment, she admits. He seemed
cold and distant and constantly demanding. Why hadn't she completed his
resume? Why was he finding it so difficult to get a job? Why wasn't she
sending more money home to his mother in Cuba?
Still, Cindy assumed it was just a natural rough patch. When he
kissed her goodbye that morning and told her he loved her, she believed
things were getting better.
When she couldn't reach him through the day, something made her leave
work early and rush home.
Eduardo had disappeared. She says her 30-year-old groom took his
suitcase, clothes and every gift of jewelry and perfume he had ever
given her. He turned their wedding photo face down and left her only way
to reach him -- his cellphone -- behind.
There was no note, no explanation, nothing.
He not only abandoned her, but the scoundrel abandoned her daughter
as well. He had always picked her up from the bus stop after school. But
not this day. If Cindy hadn't come home early, her 10-year-old would
have been left alone on the street.
"To say I was completely blindsided is an absolute understatement,"
she says softly.
Cindy called her loving mother-in-law in Havana. "She was as cold as
hell. They got what they wanted. Now he can sponsor his mom and whoever
else he wants," she says bitterly. "I'm positive it was all planned from
the start."
That became even more clear after she checked his cellphone records
and discovered that Eduardo had been calling a Toronto number three
times a day. It belongs to his "former" Cuban girlfriend who was
recently sponsored here by her husband. "He played his game very well."
She has since met many women scammed by foreigners looking for a
ticket to Canada. After all, we make it so easy. Unlike many other
countries that require that the marriage last three years before they
will hand over a permanent residents' card, Canada gives the sponsored
spouse immediate permanent status.
"Immigration were very sweet," Cindy says. "They said he is a
resident now. Regardless of what he did to get here, he has his card and
there is nothing they can do."
Every sympathetic government official offered the same reminder: she
is still financially responsible for him.
Because the betrayal and the heartache are just initial blows. In the
fine print of her sponsorship application, Cindy agreed that if he turns
to any social assistance in the next three years, she is on the hook to
repay the government in full -- even if they have to garnish her wages.
This duped bride has already lost her entire life savings of $60,000
on this romance. "I don't have any money left to pay for his wonderful
new life in Canada," she worries. "I have been left with an empty heart,
the inability to eat, the shock that the past 21/2 years of my life were
a big lie, an empty bank account, and a daughter who is traumatized."
Now she also faces the frightening prospect of being destitute, while
he laughs all the way to the welfare lines.
"The law needs to change," she insists. "Why should he still be
protected and allowed to stay here when he clearly broke the only reason
he was approved to live in Canada?"
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