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For Subscribers Star Investigation

He was deported from Canada. Then he learned border agents never shared an important document that may have swayed the judge

A letter to Canadian border agents recommending the man remain here on humanitarian grounds was deliberately kept secret, a lawsuit alleges.

Updated
3 min read
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Twain Reeves, on a video call from Jamaica, with one of his lawyers, Louis Century.


In deciding whether the deportation of a methadone-addicted Jamaican citizen should be allowed to go ahead, Federal Court judge Michael D. Manson weighed the evidence in front of him.

The man, Twain Anthony Reeves, was being given methadone by Canadian doctors to manage his pain following a workplace injury, and the prescription opioid is illegal in Jamaica. Despite this, Manson concluded, there was “no clear evidence” the man would be unable to find other effective treatment in his home country, so he denied Reeves’ request to delay his deportation.

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This letter, sent from the Jamaican Ministry of Health to the Canada Border Services Agency recommending Twain Reeves be kept in Canada on humanitarian grounds, was never shared at Reeves’s deportation hearing.

Brendan Kennedy

Brendan Kennedy is a reporter on the Toronto Star’s investigative team. Reach him via email: bkennedy@thestar.ca

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