Ottawa Citizen

Passcode for Meng home also obtained

- AMY SMART

VANCOUVER • The RCMP officer who took custody of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou's electronic­s on the day of her arrest two years ago says foreign law enforcemen­t never asked him to obtain the passcodes or search the devices.

Const. Gurvinder Dhaliwal said Monday American officials asked that Meng's devices be seized and stored in special bags to prevent them from being erased remotely, which he considered to be a reasonable request.

He said he wasn't concerned when the Canada Border Services Agency officer handed him a piece of paper with the passcodes written on it after the immigratio­n exam adjourned and she was being arrested by RCMP.

“I didn't even think about it, I just put them with the phones and I thought, this is her phones and these passcodes belong to her phones and eventually these phones and these belongings would go back to her once the process is complete,” Dhaliwal told B.C. Supreme Court under examinatio­n by Crown counsel John Gibb-Carsley.

Meng was arrested at Vancouver's airport in December 2018, nearly three hours after CBSA officials began questionin­g her as part of a border exam.

Dhaliwal told the hearing that he never asked officers from border services to obtain the passcodes or to ask any particular questions during Meng's immigratio­n exam.

Meng's lawyers are collecting informatio­n they hope will support their allegation that Canadian officers improperly gathered evidence at the request of U.S. investigat­ors under the guise of a routine border exam.

For the first time, the court also heard that security codes to at least one of Meng's homes were also recorded on a piece of paper.

Dhaliwal described a photo to the court that showed the paper on top of boxes she travelled with as having the key to her residences and a “security code” for her house.

Dhaliwal said the paper was passed to him by an RCMP officer who was based at Vancouver's airport.

“I have no idea where he got it from,” Dhaliwal said, adding he has not been involved in any discussion about those security codes.

Dhaliwal assumed the role of “exhibits officer” in Meng's case, meaning he was charged with ensuring anything seized from her was documented, safe and secure.

After her arrest, Meng's case was transferre­d to the financial integrity branch of the RCMP's Federal Serious and Organized Crime uni.

Later, Dhaliwal was contacted by a senior CBSA officer inquiring about the piece of paper with the phone passcodes, he said.

“She had indicated to me that the codes were given in error to us,” Dhaliwal said.

As the codes were already part of an exhibit, he testified that he told her they were under the court's authority and he could not return them.

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