Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Nothing unusual in U.S. request over Meng: officer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Oct, 2020 08:24 PM
  • Nothing unusual in U.S. request over Meng: officer

An RCMP officer involved in the arrest of a Huawei executive at Vancouver's airport says a flow of some information between Canadian and foreign agencies is typical in extradition requests but he had no direct contact with U.S. officials the night before her arrest.

Const. Winston Yep said in B.C. Supreme Court Monday it was an idea shared by text message from another officer and one that Yep didn't believe was wise because it could compromise public safety.

Const.Yep is the first witness to give testimony in an evidentiary hearing for Meng Wanzhou, whose legal team hopes to gather evidence this week to support its claims her arrest was unlawful.

Meng is wanted on fraud charges in the United States that both she and Huawei have denied.

Yep is the officer who told Meng of her arrest through a Mandarin interpreter, three hours after she was detained at Vancouver's airport in 2018.

Yep told the B.C. Supreme Court hearing that he was in the RCMP's foreign and domestic liaison unit when he received a request Nov. 30 from the United States via Canada's Department of Justice to arrest Meng.

He says beyond the request for Meng's extradition, United States officials also asked that her electronics be placed in a specialized bag that prevents content from being erased remotely.

He says nothing about the request struck him as unusual.

"It was part of the arrest process," Yep said.

Yep says Canadian and foreign agencies communicate with each other, but there are limits on some personal information protected by privacy laws.

He says the RCMP and Canada Border Services Agency are partners and also share information.

Yep says Meng was the third person he had ever arrested because of an extradition request. He was in the midst of conducting his second such arrest on Nov. 30, 2018, just one day before Meng was arrested, when he received the request about her.

When he read the record of case, he says he realized it was a high-profile arrest because he knew Huawei was one of the largest telecommunications companies in the world, although he had not heard of Meng before.

Yep says he travelled with a colleague to Vancouver's airport to confirm Meng was on her flight, but they had not formulated a plan beyond that.

The witnesses called to testify in court this week have been requested by Meng's defence, but a lawyer for the Attorney General of Canada was the first to question him.

About 10 witnesses are expected to testify over the course of this week.

The defence team is gathering evidence that it hopes to use in arguments next year in a hearing over whether Meng was subject to an abuse of process.

In addition to arguing her arrest and detention were unlawful, Meng's lawyers allege comments from U.S. President Donald Trump show she is being used as a bargaining chip in the relationship between China and the U.S.

Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes, who is hearing the case, is also considering whether to allow another abuse of process argument to proceed alleging that the United States misled Canadian officials in the summary of allegations it provided to them.

Meng's arrest has strained relations between Canada and China.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec Mother Found Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder In Daughters' Deaths

Quebec Mother Found Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder In Daughters' Deaths
A Quebec jury has found Adele Sorella guilty of second-degree murder in the deaths of her two young daughters, Amanda and Sabrina.  

Quebec Mother Found Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder In Daughters' Deaths

Man Found Guilty Of Abducting Daughter In Incident That Triggered Amber Alert

Man Found Guilty Of Abducting Daughter In Incident That Triggered Amber Alert
An Ontario man who snatched his four-year-old daughter from her mother's home in the early morning hours has been found guilty of abduction after a judge found 

Man Found Guilty Of Abducting Daughter In Incident That Triggered Amber Alert

'Speed Camera Ahead:' Google Maps Add Photo Radar Warnings For Drivers

'Speed Camera Ahead:' Google Maps Add Photo Radar Warnings For Drivers
Drivers using Google Maps are getting a last-minute warning as they approach some photo radar camera locations.

'Speed Camera Ahead:' Google Maps Add Photo Radar Warnings For Drivers

B.C. To Tighten Civil Forfeiture Law To Better Target Drug Crime, Hidden Assets

B.C. To Tighten Civil Forfeiture Law To Better Target Drug Crime, Hidden Assets
VICTORIA — The British Columbia government plans to strengthen its civil forfeiture law to better target drug crime and hidden assets.

B.C. To Tighten Civil Forfeiture Law To Better Target Drug Crime, Hidden Assets

Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.

Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.
About a month after a rock slide in British Columbia closed Highway 97 near Summerland, traffic is moving again on the only route along the west side of Okanagan Lake.

Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.

Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates

Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates
Prisoners advocates are asking a Federal Court to intervene in the case of a Dene man from northern Saskatchewan who they say has spent most of his adult life in segregation and is at risk of committing suicide.

Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates