National Post

B.C. judge denies new evidence in Meng case

- Nick Wells

VANCOUVER • A British Columbia Supreme Court judge will not allow new evidence to be admitted in the United States extraditio­n case of Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou.

Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes said Friday the applicatio­n by Meng’s lawyers to use the documents obtained from HSBC through a Hong Kong court is denied.

“Ms. Meng applied to induce evidence in the extraditio­n hearing a number of documents she received from HSBC. My decision is that the applicatio­n is denied, the HSBC documents will not be admitted,” Holmes said.

Her reasons for the decision will follow, she added.

Lawyers for Meng told the judge in June that the documents include internal email chains and spreadshee­ts that undermine the allegation­s of fraud against Meng, proving the United States misled the court in its summary to Canada of the case against her.

Mark Sandler and his colleague Scott Fenton, lawyers for Meng, argued the record of the case prepared against their client by U.S. prosecutor­s, and shared with Canadian officials to justify her arrest, was not an accurate descriptio­n of HSBC’S knowledge about Huawei’s control over the company Skycom. Meng is accused of lying to HSBC about Huawei’s control of Skycom, putting the bank at risk of violating U.S. sanctions against Iran. Both she and Huawei deny the allegation­s against them.

Lawyers for Canada’s attorney general asked the judge to dismiss Meng’s applicatio­n to allow the new evidence, saying the argument is more appropriat­e for her fraud trial expected in the United States, not her extraditio­n hearing in Canada.

The judge’s decision is the latest in a series of applicatio­ns and arguments by her lawyers introduced to prevent Meng from being extradited. Meng’s original extraditio­n hearing had been scheduled for last April but the judge granted her more time to review the documents from the Hong Kong court. The extraditio­n case is now set to begin Aug. 3.

Meng’s arrest at Vancouver’s airport in December 2018 at the request of the U.S. has created friction in relations between Canada and China. The detentions of Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig shortly after Meng’s arrest are widely seen as retaliatio­n by the Chinese government.

Meng remains out on bail, living in one of her two multimilli­on-dollar homes in Vancouver with her husband and children.

 ??  ?? Meng Wanzhou
Meng Wanzhou

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