Huawei CFO strikes deal with U.S. over fraud charges, allowing her to
return to China
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[September 25, 2021] By
Karen Freifeld, Kenneth Li and Moira Warburton
(Reuters) - Huawei Chief Financial Officer
Meng Wanzhou has reached an agreement with U.S. prosecutors to end the
bank fraud case against her, officials said on Friday, a move that
allows her to leave Canada, relieving a point of tension between China
and the United States.
The years-long extradition drama has been a central source of discord in
increasingly rocky ties between Beijing and Washington, with Chinese
officials signaling that the case needed to be dropped to help end a
diplomatic stalemate between the world's top two powers.
The deal also opens U.S. President Joe Biden up to criticism from China
hawks in Washington who argue his administration is capitulating to
China and one of its top companies at the center of a global technology
rivalry between the two countries.
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Meng was arrested at Vancouver International Airport in December 2018 on
a U.S. warrant, and was indicted on bank and wire fraud charges for
allegedly misleading HSBC in 2013 about the telecommunications equipment
giant's business dealings in Iran.
Her arrest sparked a diplomatic storm and drew Canada into the fray when
China arrested two Canadians, a businessman and a former diplomat,
shortly after Meng was taken into custody. Beijing has denied publicly
that the arrests are linked.
In an exclusive on Friday, Reuters reported that the United States had
reached a deferred prosecution agreement with Meng. Nicole Boeckmann,
the acting U.S. Attorney in Brooklyn, said that in entering into the
agreement, "Meng has taken responsibility for her principal role in
perpetrating a scheme to defraud a global financial institution."
The agreement pertains only to Meng, and the U.S. Justice Department
said it is preparing for trial against Huawei and looks forward to
proving its case in court.
A spokeswoman for Huawei declined to comment.
A person familiar with the matter said Meng was flying back to China on
Friday night.
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At a hearing in Brooklyn federal court on Friday, which Meng attended
virtually from Canada, Assistant U.S. Attorney David Kessler said the
government would move to dismiss the charges against her if she complies
with all of her obligations under the agreement, which ends in December
2022. He added that Meng will be released on a personal recognizance
bond, and that the United States plans to withdraw its request to Canada
for her extradition.
Meng - the daughter of Huawei founder, Ren Zhengfei - pleaded not guilty
to the charges in the hearing. When U.S. District Court Judge Ann
Donnelly later accepted the deferred prosecution agreement, Meng sighed
audibly.
A Canadian judge later signed Meng's order of discharge, vacating her
bail conditions and allowing her to go free after nearly three years of
house arrest.
She was emotional after the judge's order, hugging and thanking her
lawyers.
Speaking to supporters and reporters on the steps of the court
afterward, Meng thanked the judge for her "fairness" and talked of how
the case had turned her life "upside down".
Beyond solving a dispute between the United States and China, the
agreement could also pave the way for the release of the two Canadians,
businessman Michael Spavor and former diplomat Michael Kovrig, who have
been held in China. In August, a Chinese court sentenced Spavor to 11
years in prison for espionage.
Meng was confined to her expensive Vancouver home at night and monitored
24/7 by private security that she paid for as part of her bail
agreement. Referred to by Chinese state media as the "Princess of Huawei,"
she was required to wear an electronic ankle bracelet to monitor her
movements, which became fodder for the tabloids when it hung above her
designer shoes.
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Huawei Technologies Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou leaves her
home to attend a virtual court hearing in Vancouver, British
Columbia, Canada September 24, 2021. REUTERS/Taehoon Kim
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By contrast, the Canadians' have had no access to the outside world
beyond occasional consular visits, and their trials were held behind
closed doors.
"HUAWEI CONFIDENTIAL"
Articles published by Reuters in 2012 and 2013 about Huawei, Hong
Kong-registered company Skycom and Meng figured prominently in the U.S.
criminal case against her. Reuters reported that Skycom had offered to
sell at least 1.3 million euros worth of embargoed Hewlett-Packard
computer equipment to Iran's largest mobile-phone operator in 2010.
Reuters also reported numerous financial and personnel links between
Huawei and Skycom, including that Meng had served on Skycom's board of
directors between February 2008 and April 2009. The stories prompted
HSBC to question Meng about Reuters findings.
Huawei was placed on a U.S. trade blacklist in 2019 that restricts sales
to the company for activities contrary to U.S. national security and
foreign policy interests. The restrictions have hobbled the company,
which suffered its biggest revenue drop in the first half of 2021, after
the U.S. supply restrictions drove it to sell a chunk of its
once-dominant handset business before new growth areas have matured.
The criminal case against Meng and Huawei is cited in the blacklisting.
Huawei is charged with operating as a criminal enterprise, stealing
trade secrets and defrauding financial institutions. It has pleaded not
guilty.
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A Canadian government official said Ottawa would not comment until the
U.S. court proceedings were over. Kovrig's wife declined to comment.
Representatives for Spavor could not be reached immediately for comment.
CHINA VS USA
Huawei has become a dirty word in Washington, with China hawks in
Congress quick to react to any news that could be construed as the
United States as being soft, despite Huawei's struggles under the trade
restrictions.
Then-President Donald Trump politicized the case when he told Reuters
soon after Meng's arrest that he would intervene if it would serve
national security or help secure a trade deal. Meng's lawyers have said
she was a pawn in the political battle between the two super powers.
Republican China hardliners in Congress called Friday's deal a
"capitulation."
"Instead of standing firm against China's hostage-taking and blackmail,
President Biden folded," Republican Senator Tom Cotton said in a
statement.
Senior U.S. officials have said that Meng's case was being handled
solely by the Justice Department and the case had no bearing on the U.S.
approach to strained ties with China.
During U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman's July trip to
China, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Xie Feng insisted that the United
States drop its extradition case against Meng.
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U.S. officials have acknowledged that Beijing had linked Meng's case to
the case of the two detained Canadians, but insisted that Washington
would not be drawn into viewing them as bargaining chips.
(Reporting by Karen Freifeld, Kenneth Li, Jonathan Stempel, David
Shepardson and Michael Martina; editing by Chris Sanders and Edward
Tobin)
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