Visitor to US can visit Canada on the same US visit visa?

Contact an embassy/consulate for 'sensible" info. There's nothing etched in stone about how many offenses you did etc. An immigration officer will take into account the severity of the offences (these aren't that severe as they aren't violent crimes) plus the amount of time that has passed since you were "discharged" from the offenses. Discharged means the date when all sentences or probation were complete-not the date the offenses actually happened.

If any or both of these happened when you were under 18 years old they may be non-factors anyway. Just click your state from the list in the link for info on who to contact: http://can-am.gc.ca/offices-bureaux/inde...

You aren't visiting Canada. One is criminally inadmissible to Canada if convicted of an offense, which if committed in Canada, carries a maximum punishment of indictment. It doesn't matter your age, what the maximum is outside Canada, or what sentence you received.

Theft, burglary and impaired driving are all indictable offenses. Having multiple convictions prevents you from applying for a temporary residency permit. That leaves (a) receiving a pardon for each and every offense,, or (b) applying for criminal rehabilitation from at the embassy, paying a fee, and (if granted) waiting five years.

You must do this for *each* offense.

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