Meng Wanzhou: Canadian officer denies 'cover-up' and tailoring testimony about Meng's phone information allegedly going to FBI

A Canadian police officer has denied conducting a "cover up" and tailoring her evidence as she was challenged by Meng Wanzhou's lawyer on Thursday about the handling of information from the Huawei executive's electronic devices and whether it was sent to the American FBI.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police Sergeant Janice Vander Graaf, testifying at Meng's extradition hearing in the Supreme Court of British Columbia in Vancouver, described a verbal conversation with fellow officer Gurvinder Dhaliwal, who told her the information had been sent to the US authorities by Staff Sergeant Ben Chang.

The electronic serial number information came from devices seized from Meng by border officers at an immigration examination at Vancouver's airport in the hours before her arrest on December 1, 2018.

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But Vander Graaf testified that an email forwarded to her by Dhaliwal and written by Chang had subsequently satisfied her that the transfer had not taken place.

Meng Wanzhou arrives at the British Columbia Supreme Court to attend a hearing in Vancouver on Thursday. Photo: AP alt=Meng Wanzhou arrives at the British Columbia Supreme Court to attend a hearing in Vancouver on Thursday. Photo: AP

The verbal exchange is described in Vander Graaf's notes, which Meng's lawyers had seized upon to support their argument that Meng was the victim of a covert evidence-gathering exercise by the RCMP and the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), at the orchestration of the FBI, to aid Meng's prosecution.

Vander Graaf had said in a 2019 affidavit that she had "no independent recollection" of the conversation, or the email.

Meng's lawyer, Scott Fenton asked what had happened to cause the "epiphany". "I'm going to suggest to you that either your affidavit before the court a year ago was untrue, and/or your testimony here today purporting to have a recollection is untrue."

Vander Graaf spoke directly to Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes, saying she prepared her affidavit to the best of her ability to recollect at the time, but that after preparing further she remembered more.

This did not satisfy Fenton. "I'm going to suggest that the real reason for the striking difference between your affidavit a year ago when you have no memory, and your evidence in this court where you purport to have a memory, is that you are trying to cover up for Constable Dhaliwal and Staff Sergeant Chang," Fenton said, telling Vander Graaf that "you have tailored your evidence to suit what you think protects the RCMP in relation to this issue."

"That is absolutely not true," said Vander Graaf.

Meng Wanzhou's Huawei Mate 20 Pro phone, seized by Canadian border officers on December 1, 2018. Photo: BC Supreme Court alt=Meng Wanzhou's Huawei Mate 20 Pro phone, seized by Canadian border officers on December 1, 2018. Photo: BC Supreme Court

In the December 4, 2018, email, forwarded by Dhaliwal to Vander Graaf eight days later, Chang wrote that "we will take care of forwarding them [the FBI] information so they can obtain a MLAT for a sending order".

On Wednesday, Vander Graaf said she interpreted this to mean that the electronic serial number information from Meng's devices had not yet been sent to the FBI, and that if and when it did, it would occur under the mutual legal assistance treaty between Canada and the US.

Dhaliwal's verbal comments, recorded in Vander Graaf's notebooks, were therefore mistaken, she had said.

The Canadian government lawyers representing US interests in the case have denied that the phone information was ever sent to the FBI.

Dhaliwal previously testified that he could not recall the conversation, while Chang, who now works at a casino in the Chinese territory of Macau, has refused to testify in the case.

However, in an affidavit, Chang denies ever sending the information to the FBI.

This December 4, 2018, email from RCMP Staff Sergeant Ben Chang eased Sergeant Janice Vander Graaf's fears that information from Meng Wanzhou's phones had been sent to the FBI, Vander Graaf testified in the BC Supreme Court. Photo: BC Supreme Court exhibit alt=This December 4, 2018, email from RCMP Staff Sergeant Ben Chang eased Sergeant Janice Vander Graaf's fears that information from Meng Wanzhou's phones had been sent to the FBI, Vander Graaf testified in the BC Supreme Court. Photo: BC Supreme Court exhibit

Meng's CBSA examination at the airport lasted almost three hours, during which time she was asked about Huawei's business dealings in Iran, and her electronic devices and phone passwords were seized.

Her lawyers argue this was an abuse of process, because it occurred before Meng was told she was about to be arrested on the US warrant, and the extradition case should be thrown out as a result.

The US seeks to put Meng on trial in New York on charges that she defrauded HSBC by lying about Huawei's business dealings in Iran and thus putting the bank at risk of breaching US sanctions.

Meng, who denies the charges, is living under partial house arrest in one of the two houses she owns in Vancouver while she fights the extradition bid.

Her treatment has infuriated China. Soon after her detention, Beijing arrested Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, and accused them of spying. Ottawa considers the arrests retaliatory and both men to be victims of hostage-taking.

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP's Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2020 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Copyright (c) 2020. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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