Thursday, July 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

Border officer denies RCMP asked for Meng's codes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Nov, 2020 01:01 AM
  • Border officer denies RCMP asked for Meng's codes

The border officer who led Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou's immigration exam before her arrest at Vancouver's airport says he doesn't believe RCMP asked him to collect the passcodes to her phones.

Sowmith Katragadda told an evidence-gathering hearing in Meng's B.C. Supreme Court extradition case he couldn't recall where the idea came from.

Meng's lawyers are collecting information they hope will bolster their allegation that Canadian officials gathered evidence improperly during her arrest in 2018 at the request of American officials under the guise of a routine immigration exam.

Meng is wanted in the United States on fraud charges based on allegations related to U.S. sanctions against Iran that both she and Huawei deny.

Katragadda has told the court that he asked another officer to collect the passcodes from Meng but didn't know if the request to collect the codes was his idea or one of his supervisors.

One of Meng's lawyers, Mona Duckett, suggested to Katragadda that RCMP officers, who were waiting in his supervisors' office to arrest Meng, asked him to do so.

Katragadda was in the same office when he asked his colleague by radio to collect the codes, court has heard.

"It was in fact the RCMP in the superintendents' office who asked you to get the passcodes, isn't it?" Duckett asked Katragadda during cross-examination.

"I do not believe so," Katragadda said.

The passcodes were passed to RCMP along with Meng's electronic devices by mistake, court has heard.

MORE National ARTICLES

U.S. Residents Visiting B.C. Help Save Drowning Man In North Vancouver

U.S. Residents Visiting B.C. Help Save Drowning Man In North Vancouver
VANCOUVER - Several Good Samaritans from the United States have saved a man from drowning in British Columbia.    

U.S. Residents Visiting B.C. Help Save Drowning Man In North Vancouver

Airline Confirms Three Dead After Float Plane Crashes In Labrador Lake

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - A search is underway for four people missing after a float plane crashed into a Labrador lake on Monday, killing three of the occupants.    

Airline Confirms Three Dead After Float Plane Crashes In Labrador Lake

Cuts To Legal Aid Ontario Will Cause Hearing Delays: Immigration Refugee Board

Cuts To Legal Aid Ontario Will Cause Hearing Delays: Immigration Refugee Board
The tribunal that adjudicates asylum claims in Canada says it expects cuts to legal-aid funding imposed by the Doug Ford government in Ontario will lead to delays and other disruptions of refugee hearings.

Cuts To Legal Aid Ontario Will Cause Hearing Delays: Immigration Refugee Board

Ride-Hailing To Come To B.C., But Will Uber, Lyft?

VICTORIA - The British Columbia government's firm position on tougher driver's licence requirements for ride-hailing is a move in the right direction, given the experiences from other jurisdictions, a transportation expert says.    

Ride-Hailing To Come To B.C., But Will Uber, Lyft?

Jagmeet Singh Sees Quebec As 'Fertile Ground' For NDP As He Hits Province For Tour

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the province of Quebec offers the New Democrats "fertile ground" despite private hand-wringing about its current state ahead of the election.

Jagmeet Singh Sees Quebec As 'Fertile Ground' For NDP As He Hits Province For Tour

IIO Investigates VPD After Man Dies In Fall From West End Apartment

IIO Investigates VPD After Man Dies In Fall From West End Apartment
A distraught man, throwing large items out of a high-rise West End apartment, has fallen to his death.

IIO Investigates VPD After Man Dies In Fall From West End Apartment