Thursday, April 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

Judge issues reasons for rejecting Meng evidence

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jul, 2021 03:12 PM
  • Judge issues reasons for rejecting Meng evidence

 A B.C. Supreme Court judge says she won't allow proposed new evidence in Meng Wanzhou's extradition case because it doesn't "expressly" support the Huawei executive's claim that the United States' case against her is "manifestly unreliable."

Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes ruled July 9 against admitting the evidence but her reasons for the judgment were not released until Wednesday. 

Meng is wanted in the United States on allegations that she misled HSBC about Huawei's relationship with another company, putting the bank at risk of violating U.S. sanctions against Iran — charges that both she and Huawei deny. 

Meng's legal team argued that the documents undermine the allegations of fraud against Meng, proving the United States misled the court in its summary to Canada of the case against her.

The documents recently obtained by Meng's legal team from HSBC through a court agreement in Hong Kong include internal email chains and spreadsheets.

Holmes says in the ruling that while the documents would "no doubt be valuable to Meng in a trial," they don't expressly state Meng's conclusion, which can only be reached through inferences. 

"It is only inferences from the documents that support those facts or conclusions, and they are not the only reasonable inferences the documents support," Holmes writes in the ruling. 

The documents are also not capable of showing that the inferences made by the United States in its summary of allegations against Meng were unreasonable, she says. 

Holmes says that weighing competing inferences falls in the jurisdiction of a trial, not an extradition hearing. 

"Competing potential inferences may or may not play an important part in the trial, where witnesses will testify and be cross-examined, and the body of evidence will be far more complete," she writes. 

"In the context of an extradition hearing, the true or most appropriate inference cannot be determined."

The final two to three weeks of hearings in Meng's extradition case are scheduled to begin Aug. 3.

MORE National ARTICLES

MPs open to changes to treatment of witnesses

MPs open to changes to treatment of witnesses
This came to a head at a recent ethics committee meeting, which is looking at how to protect the privacy of people who appear on websites such as Pornhub.

MPs open to changes to treatment of witnesses

19 year old man passes away after being shot in Surrey

19 year old man passes away after being shot in Surrey
On Friday afternoon, the man arrived at a Surrey hospital with a gunshot wound and soon after passed away as a result of succumbing to his injuries. 

19 year old man passes away after being shot in Surrey

Man and woman being treated for injuries after being stabbed in Maple Ridge

Man and woman being treated for injuries after being stabbed in Maple Ridge
Police responded to the home and learned that two men had gotten into an altercation with the residents and assaulted a man and a woman. 

Man and woman being treated for injuries after being stabbed in Maple Ridge

Liberals table sweeping budget bill

Liberals table sweeping budget bill
There are also provisions in the bill to give the National Research Council a mandate to produce "drugs and devices" to protect or improve Canadians' health.

Liberals table sweeping budget bill

J&J vaccine should be used in people over 30: NACI

J&J vaccine should be used in people over 30: NACI
No J&J doses have been injected in Canada thus far, but in the U.S. they have documented 17 cases of the blood-clotting disorder in about eight million doses given.

J&J vaccine should be used in people over 30: NACI

Thousands of air travellers positive for COVID-19

Thousands of air travellers positive for COVID-19
Forty per cent of those people were infected with one of the three variants of concern Canada is tracking.

Thousands of air travellers positive for COVID-19