Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

'No Need' For Lengthy Border Exam Of Meng Wanzhou Before Her Arrest: Defence

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Sep, 2019 07:20 PM

    VANCOUVER - The defence team for a Huawei executive whose arrest at Vancouver's airport sparked a diplomatic crisis between Canada and China says there was no good reason for border officials to detain her for almost three hours before her arrest.

     

    Scott Fenton, a defence lawyer for Meng Wanzhou, told the B.C. Supreme Court that border officials already knew that Meng was facing charges in the United States by the time she got off her flight from Hong Kong.

     

    He says that means officials also knew she would be arrested and taken before the courts, that they had no power to remove her and that they could already report her as inadmissible because of the allegations she faces in the U.S.

     

    Instead, Fenton says she was held for three hours and a border official questioned her about her business in Iran before she was informed of her arrest and read her rights.

     

    Meng was arrested Dec. 1, 2018, at the request of the United States, which is seeking her extradition on fraud charges in violation of sanctions with Iran.

     

    Both Meng and Chinese tech giant Huawei have denied any wrongdoing and none of the allegations have been tested in court.

     

    Fenton says border official recorded that passwords to her phones and relayed them to RCMP along with her electronic devices as evidence that her detention was not a routine border check but a "covert criminal investigation."

     

    He argues the provisional arrest warrant calling for her "immediate" arrest should have taken precedence over an immigration examination.

     

    "There was no need for this lengthy examination of the applicant," he told the court.

     

    Meng, who is the chief financial officer of Huawei and the daughter of the company's founder, is free on bail and living in Vancouver.

     

    Meng's legal team is asking the court to further documentation to support its argument that her arrest at Vancouver's airport was unlawful ahead of her extradition trial, which is scheduled to begin in January.

     

    Canada's attorney general has not yet presented its response in court, but documents show it will say officials followed the law when they detained Meng and the defence has no proof to substantiate its "conspiracy theory" that she was illegally arrested.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    16-Year-Old Greta Thunberg Turns Tables On Trump And Changes Twitter Bio

    Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg changed her Twitter biography Tuesday, embracing U.S. President Donald Trump's description of her.

    16-Year-Old Greta Thunberg Turns Tables On Trump And Changes Twitter Bio

    B.C. Auditor General Carol Bellringer Resigns, Cites Personal Reasons

    VICTORIA - British Columbia's auditor general has announced her resignation, citing personal reasons for the decision.

    B.C. Auditor General Carol Bellringer Resigns, Cites Personal Reasons

    Log Truck Convoy Drives Home Message About Dire State Of B.C. Forest Industry

    Log Truck Convoy Drives Home Message About Dire State Of B.C. Forest Industry
    The convoy will begin in Merritt, nearly 300 kilometres northeast of Vancouver.    

    Log Truck Convoy Drives Home Message About Dire State Of B.C. Forest Industry

    Sentencing Hearing For Calgary Man Guilty In Five-year-old Grandson's Death

    CALGARY - The Crown and defence agree that a Calgary man convicted of killing his five-year-old grandson should get significant prison time.    

    Sentencing Hearing For Calgary Man Guilty In Five-year-old Grandson's Death

    Andrew Scheer, Jagmeet Singh Skeptical Of Liberal Climate Plan To Reach Zero Carbon Emissions

    OTTAWA - Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh poured cold water Tuesday on the new Liberal commitment to combat climate change by achieving zero net carbon emissions in Canada by 2050.    

    Andrew Scheer, Jagmeet Singh Skeptical Of Liberal Climate Plan To Reach Zero Carbon Emissions

    Former Ontario Provincial Police Union Leaders On Trial For Fraud

    Former Ontario Provincial Police Union Leaders On Trial For Fraud
    TORONTO - Three leaders of Ontario's provincial police union set up a scheme that used a travel company and consulting firm to defraud union members, prosecutors told the group's trial Tuesday.

    Former Ontario Provincial Police Union Leaders On Trial For Fraud