CSIS knowledge of multi-hour delay in Meng’s arrest ‘troubling’: lawyers
VANCOUVER — Lawyers for Meng Wanzhou allege Canada’s national spy agency was in on a plan for border officers to detain the Huawei executive for hours before her arrest and was mindful of the case’s political implications.
Meng is wanted on fraud charges in the United States, but she and Huawei have both denied the allegations and say the extradition case should be thrown out.
Lawyers for Meng argue her charter rights were violated when she was held and questioned by border officials who seized her electronics and passwords, which were shared with the RCMP before she was notified of her arrest on Dec. 1, 2018, at Vancouver’s airport.
In a document filed with the Federal Court, Meng’s lawyers say a two-page redacted report shows the Canadian Security Intelligence Service was aware of a planned multi-hour delay because it says her arrest was expected to occur at about 4 p.m. even though her plane landed at 11:30 a.m.