Two weeks ago, the Sun exclusively reported that a file within the federal government had been opened to investigate Democratic Institutions Minister Maryam Monsef for citizenship fraud.

During a recent Huffington Post town hall event, Monsef was asked to address the controversy surrounding her birthplace – in Iran, not Afghanistan as she once claimed.

Monsef was specifically asked if she knew anything about the file and the investigation into her possible citizenship fraud.

In response, Monsef denied that any investigation was taking place.

“If there’s an investigation, folks are notified,” said Monsef. “And that hasn’t happened.”

Simply put, Monsef’s answer is untrue. That is not how fraud investigations work.

Following the Sun’s initial report on the file being opened to investigate Monsef, her communications director gave a similar response. He said it was “standard practice” for a person to be notified when they are being investigated for fraud.

Government sources have offered the same explanation to the Globe and Mail, the Canadian Press and likely several other journalists in Ottawa.

But this information is not correct. It is not the case that the subject of a fraud investigation is notified when an investigative file is opened.

I have spoken with several immigration lawyers who have confirmed this. Prominent Toronto-based immigration lawyer Guidy Mamann told me the idea someone that would be notified of an investigation is “absolute nonsense.”

Data from the Department of Citizenship and Immigration Canada backs this up.

According to a statistical overview on citizenship fraud investigations from 2012 – the most recent data available – there were 3,129 Canadian citizens under investigation for citizenship fraud. Of those, only 530 were notified through what is called a Notice of Intent.

In other words, only one in six people investigated for citizenship fraud are notified.

In the great majority of cases, individuals are only informed if the government decides to move forward with citizenship revocation. Otherwise, they’re not told at all.

Anyone who regularly reads the news and sees stories about citizenship revocation would be aware of this process – a process which is often criticized in the media.

On September 18, 2016, the Canadian Press wrote a story about Byrdie Funk – a woman who was born abroad to Canadian parents and brought to Canada when she was just two months old.

According to the story, “earlier this year the 36-year-old woman’s life was upended when she received a letter from Citizenship and Immigration Canada informing her she was no longer a Canadian citizen.”

“‘It took my breath away,’ Funk said in an interview from her home in Squamish, B.C.”

Like thousands of others, Funk was not notified that the government had opened a file to investigate her. She had no idea immigration officials were working to determine whether or not her parents had followed Canada’s immigration rules. She only learned about the investigation after it was over – and after the government had decided to revoke her citizenship.

That’s how the system works. And that’s how the Trudeau government continues to apply our immigration laws.

So whether Monsef is knowingly being dishonest, or if she's been fed lies by others and failed to check the facts, either way, she is blatantly misleading Canadians about our citizenship laws.

It’s one thing for a Trudeau-appointed partisan aide to try to bend the truth and spin a journalist. It’s quite another for Monsef herself, a Minister of the Crown, to relay untrue information about government investigations.

Monsef is digging herself deeper into this hole. And her credibility continues to suffer.