U.S. says Huawei lawyer's prior work at Justice
Department poses conflicts
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[May 11, 2019]
By Karen Freifeld
(Reuters) - Huawei Technologies Co Ltd
lawyer James Cole's prior work at the U.S. Department of Justice created
conflicts of interest that should disqualify him from defending the
Chinese company in a case of alleged bank fraud and sanctions
violations, U.S. prosecutors said in a filing on Friday.
Last week, the prosecutors filed a motion to disqualify Cole, who served
as deputy attorney general, the No. 2 official at the Justice
Department, between 2011 and 2015. But the motion was sealed and
classified, and prosecutors did not make public the reasons behind the
move.
"There is a 'substantial risk' that Cole could use 'confidential factual
information' obtained while serving as DAG to 'materially advance'
Huawei's current defense strategy," the prosecutors said, according to a
redacted copy of the U.S. motion filed on Friday in U.S. District Court
in Brooklyn, New York.
Cole was not immediately available for comment. But in a statement
Huawei said the U.S. wants to strip the company of counsel of its choice
while concealing the facts on why.
"The Justice Department's motion to disqualify Jim Cole makes a mockery
of the adversarial process," the statement said.
"The government has known since 2017 that Mr. Cole represented Huawei in
this matter. Now, two years later, not only does the Justice Department
seek to strip Huawei of counsel of its choice, but it does so while
concealing from Huawei and the public virtually all of the facts on
which it bases its motion."
The case against Huawei, the world's largest telecommunications
equipment maker, has ratcheted up tensions between Beijing and
Washington as the world's top two economic powers try to negotiate a
trade deal.
The company's chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, daughter of
Huawei's founder, was arrested in Canada in December at the behest of
U.S. authorities for her role in the alleged fraud. Meng has said she is
innocent and is fighting extradition.
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A man walks past a sign board of Huawei at CES (Consumer Electronics
Show) Asia 2018 in Shanghai, China June 14, 2018. REUTERS/Aly
Song/File Photo
In Friday's filing, U.S. prosecutors said Cole's representation of Huawei poses
"irresolvable conflicts of interest."
As deputy attorney general, Cole "personally supervised and participated in
aspects of" an investigation that caused the conflicts, the prosecutors said in
the filing.
Details of that probe were redacted, but the filing said the Huawei prosecution
is "substantially related" to the matter.
The prosecutors said Cole possessed information from his government work related
to his Huawei representation that he could not reveal, and this created the risk
he would rely on the information in breach his duties to the Justice Department.
Secondly, because the nature of the conflict is classified, the prosecutors
said, Huawei cannot obtain enough information for them to waive any conflict.
The case against Huawei and Meng accuses them of conspiring to defraud HSBC
Holdings Plc and other banks by misrepresenting Huawei’s relationship with
Skycom Tech Co Ltd, a company that operated in Iran, putting the banks at risk
of penalties for processing transactions that violated U.S. sanctions laws.
Huawei has said Skycom was a local business partner. The United States maintains
it was an unofficial subsidiary used to conceal Huawei’s Iran business.
U.S. authorities claim Huawei used Skycom to obtain embargoed U.S. goods,
technology and services in Iran, and to move money via the international banking
system.
Last month, prosecutors said they planned to use information about Huawei in the
case that was obtained through secret surveillance.
Cole entered a not guilty plea on behalf of Huawei and its U.S. subsidiary in
Brooklyn on March 14.
(Reporting by Karen Freifeld; additional reporting by Brendan Pierson; editing
by Bill Rigby, Leslie Adler, Cynthia Osterman and Alexandra Hudson)
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