The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Border agent recounts FBI call in Meng extraditio­n case

- TESSA VIKANDER AND MOIRA WARBURTON

VANCOUVER/TORONTO — A Canadian border official testified on Friday he received an “out of the ordinary” request from the FBI for the phone number of the supervisor on duty the next day when Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou was to arrive in Canada.

Bryce McRae, a superinten­dent with the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), testified in British Columbia Supreme Court that the FBI did not in fact call agents at Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport the following day.

The call from the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion employee lasted “maybe a minute or two” and was “out of the ordinary,” McRae said.

He informed her that he would be on duty and gave her his number, but did not know why she asked for it.

Meng’s lawyers have argued that the FBI conspired with the CBSA, the Canadian federal police and others at the time of her arrest to mount a “covert criminal investigat­ion.”

Meng, 48, was arrested on a U.S. warrant while on a layover at the airport, bound for Mexico.

The United States charged her with bank fraud, accusing her of misleading HSBC about Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd.’s business dealings in Iran, causing the bank to break U.S. sanctions.

Meng has said she is innocent and is fighting the charges from Vancouver where she is under house arrest, monitored by private security at her home in the upscale neighborho­od of Shaughness­y.

Last week’s witness crossexami­nation forms part of Meng’s U.S. extraditio­n hearing, where her lawyers have tried to back their claims that her rights were abused during her arrest and errors were made, such as the sharing of her passcodes with police.

Prosecutor­s for the Canadian government have tried to prove that Meng’s arrest was by the book, and any lapses in due process should not affect the validity of her extraditio­n.

 ?? REUTERS/JENNIFER GAUTHIER ?? Huawei Technologi­es chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou returns to court following a lunch break in Vancouver, B.C. on Oct. 26.
REUTERS/JENNIFER GAUTHIER Huawei Technologi­es chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou returns to court following a lunch break in Vancouver, B.C. on Oct. 26.

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