Medicine Hat News

Passcode sharing a ‘heart wrenching’ personal mistake, Border officer says

- AMY SMART

VANCOUVER

A Canadian border officer says Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou’s phone passcodes were shared with the RCMP two years ago through a personal blunder, not a plot between law enforcemen­t agencies to thwart privacy laws.

Scott Kirkland testified at a B.C. Supreme Court hearing on Friday that he placed a piece of paper with the codes on top of Meng’s electronic devices during her customs and immigratio­n exam before her arrest at Vancouver’s airport. He only realized it was gone days later during a debrief meeting, he said.

“It was an embarrassi­ng moment for me in that meeting,” Kirkland said. “It was heart-wrenching to realize I made that mistake.”

The court heard 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 her under the pretence of a routine immigratio­n exam, and that both RCMP and Canada Border Services Agency officials kept intentiona­lly poor notes.

Kirkland rejected that characteri­zation under cross-examinatio­n Friday.

“My suggestion is that you and the RCMP co-ordinated your efforts to be able to allow the CBSA to use their statutory mandate to obtain evidence that may be of assistance to other law enforcemen­t,” defence lawyer Mona Duckett said.

Kirkland said that idea didn’t make sense to him.

“There’s more headache than there is gain to do anything like that,” he said, adding he knew the case would be scrutinize­d by several levels of law enforcemen­t.

“Do you have a headache right now?” Duckett asked.

“Yeah, I’ve had a constant headache for the past three days,” Kirkland said on the third day of his testimony.

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. The court has heard that Kirkland first learned of the case only one hour before Meng’s plane landed.

RCMP and border agency officers agreed in a meeting that morning that the CBSA would examine Meng before handing her to the Mounties to execute the arrest, three witnesses have testified.

Kirkland and his supervisor, Supt. Bryce McRae, each told the court that Meng had been flagged because of a warrant. They both said they found informatio­n in online news articles that suggested she might pose a national security risk.

McRae testified that when such a “lookout” is issued for a passenger, border officers are obligated to conduct an exam to determine if the passenger is admissible to Canada, even if the passenger is only in transit to another destinatio­n.

The court has heard the lookout for Meng did not indicate a security risk.

Border officers identified Meng on the jetway, collected her phones and brought her into an examinatio­n room. While another officer questioned Meng, Kirkland said he kept watch over her electronic­s.

At one point, the officer asked Kirkland to collect Meng’s phone numbers. He couldn’t recall if he was asked to collect the passcodes or made the decision himself.

But he denied that he led Meng to believe she was required to share them.

Meng asked why Kirkland needed the numbers and codes, and he told her it was for the purposes of the customs and immigratio­n examinatio­n. He wrote them down for her because she was uncomforta­ble with her own handwritin­g, he said.

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

“I did not say she had no choice,” Kirkland said.

“I explained why we were asking for them.”

 ?? CP PHOTO JONATHAN HAYWARD ?? Chief Financial Officer of Huawei, Meng Wanzhou is flanked by security as she arrives at court in downtown Vancouver on Friday. Wanzhou was heading to the British Columbia Supreme Court in an evidentiar­y hearing on her extraditio­n case on abuse of process argument.
CP PHOTO JONATHAN HAYWARD Chief Financial Officer of Huawei, Meng Wanzhou is flanked by security as she arrives at court in downtown Vancouver on Friday. Wanzhou was heading to the British Columbia Supreme Court in an evidentiar­y hearing on her extraditio­n case on abuse of process argument.

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