National Post

Huawei CFO’S team asks judge to adjourn final hearings to August

Were scheduled to begin on April 26

- Amy smart

• Lawyers for Meng Wanzhou asked a B.C. Supreme Court judge Monday to delay the final leg of hearings in the Huawei executive’s extraditio­n case one week before it is set to begin.

Richard Peck said the legal team needs time to review new evidence obtained through a court order in Hong Kong that could support its argument that the United States misled Canadian officials in describing the allegation­s against Meng.

“What we request is a reasonable time in which to assess the documents and determine their likely admissibil­ity,” he said.

In response, a lawyer for Canada’s attorney general argued there’s no basis to believe the documents will be relevant and accused Meng’s team of trying to turn the extraditio­n hearing into a trial. After 21/2 years of legal proceeding­s, “and mere days from reaching the finish line, the applicant asks this court to take a several month pause. Her request should be denied,” the Crown said in a written response.

Meng was arrested at Vancouver’s airport in 2018 at the request of the U.S. to face fraud charges that both she and Huawei deny. She is accused of lying to bank HSBC about Huawei’s control of subsidiary Skycom during a presentati­on in 2013, putting the bank at risk of violating U.S. sanctions against Iran.

The court has heard that Huawei sold Skycom to Canicula Holdings, another company that Huawei controlled financiall­y, in 2007.

While Meng’s Canadian lawyers have not yet seen most of the documents from HSBC and their contents are unclear, Peck said it’s believed they will shed light on what the bank knew about the relationsh­ip between the firms and how much it relied on Meng’s 2013 presentati­on.

“We say these materials are relevant because they are referenced from the very bank at the very time including the very parties involved in this matter,” Peck said.

Meng’s team also said in court documents that Canada’s attorney general should launch an investigat­ion into whether Meng was arrested based on inaccurate informatio­n. Peck proposed the final three weeks of the hearing, set to begin April 26, be adjourned until Aug. 3 to allow time for such a probe, as well as for COVID-19 cases to subside.

Robert Frater, a lawyer for Canada’s attorney general, said there’s no evidence to believe the new documents are relevant to the extraditio­n case. Meng’s team relies entirely on two letters from Huawei’s U.S. lawyers in which allegation­s are made, but support for the allegation­s is redacted and those lawyers are “aligned” with Meng, he said. He added the U.S. has “vigorously” denied the allegation­s, so Meng’s team is essentiall­y asking the B.C. Supreme Court to weigh one side against the other, a job better suited for the U.S. trial.

Frater also accused Meng’s team of “jurisdicti­on shopping” for a court that would approve the document disclosure. Meng’s lawyers previously failed in an effort to access the same documents through a court in the U.K.

Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes reserved her decision until Wednesday.

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Meng Wanzhou

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