HUNTER: Accused killer twice torpedoed by Canada. Why is she still here?

· Toronto Sun

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If the Canadian immigration apparatus redrew the rules of baseball, there would be 10 strikes and 10 outs. One ball would be all that’s needed for a walk.

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Dzsenifer Olah , 25, got a walk.

The Toronto woman, by way of Hungary , has now been charged with murder in the wake of a North York brawl in which a man was struck and killed by a vehicle.

Cops say the incident unfolded on June 14 in the Keele St. and Wilson Ave. area around 6 a.m. when the violence in a donnybrook escalated. Erik Safar, 32, also of Toronto, was assaulted, then mowed down by a vehicle.

Safar was critically injured and died at the scene.

Olah — who turned herself in over the weekend — is charged with second-degree murder along with Milan Andras Babos, 18, of Hamilton, and Richard Olah, 23, of Toronto, who also both surrendered to police.

“Investigators would like to thank the public for their assistance in this investigation,” cops said in a release.

But there is much, much more to the story.

Was ruled inadmissible twice

According to a Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) source, Dzsenifer Olah offers a pretty good peek into the frequently bizarre machinations at immigration’s Refugee Protection Division (RPD). She was ruled inadmissible at least twice.

“She came here in 2011, probably with her whole clan, and … they made the refugee claim,” the source said, asking for anonymity due to the sensitive nature of their job. “They were rejected by the RPD (Refugee Protection Division) and her court appeal was refused. But wait …”

It is now strike four.

The RPD is a specific tribunal within the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB) responsible for hearing and deciding refugee claims that are made inside Canada. For Dzsenifer Olah, there was a fifth strike.

“So get this, a member of the RPD (who usually has a law degree) and a federal court judge told Dzsenifer Olah to hit the bricks,” the source said.

“And now, two years later, some moronic, faceless bureaucrat who gets paid way less, and who most likely is not a lawyer, and is just some office pencil pusher, grants (her) protected person status.”

The bureaucrat had decided that Hungary is, of course, a Nazi hellhole.

Who is protecting Canadians?

In the opaque world of Canadian immigration, PRRA stands for Pre-Removal Risk Assessment. Think of it as kind of a strike nine. It gives claimants a final safety net process that evaluates whether the person facing deportation would face severe harm if returned to their home country, in this case Hungary.

“Now we’re stuck with her… even if she’s convicted,” the source said. “You can add her to the long line of Danger Opinions we need.”

A Danger Opinion is the final line in the sand made by the minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada or Public Safety deeming an individual “a major risk to the Canadian public or national security.”

As for the two men arrested, Milan Andras Babos was also granted refugee status by “some moron” on the RPD. The source believes Richard Olah is the brother of Dzsenifer Olah because they share a surname and “their dates” and “history line up.”

Now, the question remains: Our fonctionnaires bend over backwards to “protect” some very spurious refugee claimants but who is protecting Canadians?

Strike 10. We’re out.

None of the charges against the accused have been proven in court.

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@HunterTOSun

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