Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Border officer says Meng had choice to share codes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Oct, 2020 07:29 PM
  • Border officer says Meng had choice to share codes

A border officer denies that he led Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou to believe that she was required to share the passcodes to her phones when he asked for them before her arrest two years ago.

The B.C. Supreme Court is hearing evidence this week that Meng's defence team hopes will bolster an argument they will make next year during extradition proceedings that she was subject to an abuse of process.

The defence alleges that Meng was subjected to a "co-ordinated strategy" to have the RCMP delay her arrest so border officials could question Meng under the pretence of a routine immigration exam, and that both RCMP and Canada Border Services Agency officials kept intentionally poor notes.

Scott Kirkland, a border services officer, is the second witness testifying in the evidentiary hearing and he says he wrote down Meng's phone numbers and passcodes because she was uncomfortable with her own handwriting.

He says Meng asked why he needed them and he told her it was for the purposes of the customs and immigration examination at Vancouver's airport.

He says he asked for the passwords to her other devices but she declined.

"I did not say she had no choice," Kirkland said under cross-examination by defence lawyer Mona Duckett.

"I explained why we were asking for them."

Kirkland says the phones remained in an anti-static bag in his pocket and were never examined by border officials while Meng was in the secondary screening room.

Seven minutes after the phone numbers and passcodes were recorded, Meng was escorted into another room where RCMP officers arrested her and informed her of her charter rights to silence and counsel.

Kirkland was not leading the immigration screening and says that while he was asked to collect her phone numbers, he can't recall if he was asked to collect her passcodes or made the decision himself.

He has said it's typical to search phones and devices during a customs and immigrations examinations when there is a suspicion of inadmissibility to Canada, and he assumed the border agency would search Meng's devices.

Meng is wanted in the United States on fraud charges over allegations she lied to HSBC about Huawei's relationship with a company doing business in Iran, putting the bank at risk of violating American sanctions against that country.

Meng and Huawei deny the allegations.

Next year, her defence team will try to prove she was subject to an abuse of process in three different areas. They allege that her questioning and arrest at the airport was unlawful, that she has been used as a "bargaining chip" by U.S. President Donald Trump in relations with China, and that the United States misled Canadian officials in its summary of allegations against her.

MORE National ARTICLES

Suspect Identified And Connected To A Series Of Alleged Assaults In Glen Park

Coquitlam RCMP plainclothes investigators have identified a suspect who is being linked to seven alleged assaults in or near Glen Park at 1149 Westwood Street, Coquitlam. The suspect was previously unknown to police.

Suspect Identified And Connected To A Series Of Alleged Assaults In Glen Park

Indigenous Young People File Complaints After Victoria Police Arrests

VICTORIA - British Columbia's police complaints commissioner says it has received several complaints about use of force by Victoria police during the arrests of young Indigenous protesters inside a cabinet minister's office.    

Indigenous Young People File Complaints After Victoria Police Arrests

Care Access Up In Canada But Electronic Medical-Record Use Lags Behind

Care Access Up In Canada But Electronic Medical-Record Use Lags Behind
VANCOUVER - Family doctors in Canada are providing increased access to care compared with most of their counterparts in 10 other countries butstill lag behind when it comes to using electronic medical records, findings of a survey show.    

Care Access Up In Canada But Electronic Medical-Record Use Lags Behind

RCMP Pipeline Checkpoint 'Arbitrary And Discriminatory,' Say Complainants

VANCOUVER - The Wet'suwet'en hereditary clan chiefs and their supporters want a public investigation into the way the RCMP are controlling access along a rural road in northern British Columbia.

RCMP Pipeline Checkpoint 'Arbitrary And Discriminatory,' Say Complainants

Parole Board Extends Day Parole For Reena Virk’s Killer Kelly Ellard, Who Has Had A Second Child

A decision from the Parole Board of Canada says a woman convicted in the murder of Victoria teenager Reena Virk has had a second child while on day parole.

Parole Board Extends Day Parole For Reena Virk’s Killer Kelly Ellard, Who Has Had A Second Child

Vancouver Police Did Not Contribute To Crash That Killed Yellow Cab Driver Sanehpal Randhawa: IIO

The Independent Investigations Office says police reported that just before 3:30 a.m. on Dec. 29, a Car2Go smart car made off from a road check on the city's east side.

Vancouver Police Did Not Contribute To Crash That Killed Yellow Cab Driver Sanehpal Randhawa: IIO