Canada judge rejects Huawei CFO's push to use employee statements as
evidence in U.S. extradition case
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[March 13, 2021] By
Moira Warburton
VANCOUVER (Reuters) - The Canadian judge in
Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou's U.S. extradition case rejected her request to
admit as evidence Huawei employee statements that contradict a U.S.
claim she misled bankers about the company's business in Iran, a ruling
said on Friday.
But the judge provisionally allowed parts of an expert's report that
Meng's team requested be permitted into evidence, subject to further
submissions about its relevance, the ruling showed.
Meng, 49, was arrested in December 2018 at Vancouver International
Airport on a U.S. warrant for allegedly misleading HBSC about Huawei's
business dealings in Iran and causing the bank to violate U.S.
sanctions.
She has since been fighting the case from under house arrest in
Vancouver and has said she is innocent.
The evidence Meng's team sought to add related to their claim that HSBC
knew about Huawei's businesses in Iran, and that Meng did not mislead
the bank.
Two affidavits were from Huawei employees who attended the meeting where
the United States alleges Meng lied about the company's business
connections in Iran.
Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes of British Columbia Supreme Court
said that allowing this into evidence "could do no more than invite
credibility findings," turning the case into a he-said-she-said.
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Huawei Technologies Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou leaves her
home to attend a court hearing in Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada March 1, 2021. REUTERS/Jennifer Gauthier
Holmes also rejected two more Huawei employee affidavits alleging that HSBC
employees knew about Huawei's connections to businesses in Iran, stating that
they were beyond the "proper scope" of an extradition hearing.
"The difficulty Ms. Meng faces is that this body of evidence relates to issues
properly within the domain of a trial, not the extradition hearing," Holmes
wrote.
Holmes did provisionally allow parts of a report by an expert on the application
of U.S. sanctions law to financial institutions, stating it could address a
potentially misleading aspect of U.S. evidence. But she said that more
submissions would be necessary to prove its relevance.
Meng is set to appear in court on Monday as her case enters the final phase of
arguments, scheduled to finish in May.
Huawei did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton in Vancouver; Editing by Leslie Adler and Cynthia
Osterman)
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