Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Border officer denies RCMP asked for Meng's codes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Nov, 2020 01:01 AM
  • Border officer denies RCMP asked for Meng's codes

The border officer who led Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou's immigration exam before her arrest at Vancouver's airport says he doesn't believe RCMP asked him to collect the passcodes to her phones.

Sowmith Katragadda told an evidence-gathering hearing in Meng's B.C. Supreme Court extradition case he couldn't recall where the idea came from.

Meng's lawyers are collecting information they hope will bolster their allegation that Canadian officials gathered evidence improperly during her arrest in 2018 at the request of American officials under the guise of a routine immigration exam.

Meng is wanted in the United States on fraud charges based on allegations related to U.S. sanctions against Iran that both she and Huawei deny.

Katragadda has told the court that he asked another officer to collect the passcodes from Meng but didn't know if the request to collect the codes was his idea or one of his supervisors.

One of Meng's lawyers, Mona Duckett, suggested to Katragadda that RCMP officers, who were waiting in his supervisors' office to arrest Meng, asked him to do so.

Katragadda was in the same office when he asked his colleague by radio to collect the codes, court has heard.

"It was in fact the RCMP in the superintendents' office who asked you to get the passcodes, isn't it?" Duckett asked Katragadda during cross-examination.

"I do not believe so," Katragadda said.

The passcodes were passed to RCMP along with Meng's electronic devices by mistake, court has heard.

MORE National ARTICLES

Fire forces residents from downtown Victoria hotel

Fire forces residents from downtown Victoria hotel
Victoria police say a man called officers to a suite in the Capital CityCenter Hotel Thursday night, saying he was armed and capable of harming himself.

Fire forces residents from downtown Victoria hotel

Advice spurned to boost police at casinos: inquiry

Advice spurned to boost police at casinos: inquiry
Fred Pinnock, who was in charge of the now-defunct illegal gaming enforcement team, testified that he felt the RCMP needed to have an increased police presence in casinos and racetracks, but the suggestion wasn't "warmly received."

Advice spurned to boost police at casinos: inquiry

Whole Foods will let employees wear poppies after drawing ire for its earlier ban

Whole Foods will let employees wear poppies after drawing ire for its earlier ban
The policy is a blanket ban on anything other than the retailer's basic uniform -- a Whole Foods apron, coat or vest, hat, and standard-issue name tag -- and doesn't single out poppies, the Amazon-owned chain said.

Whole Foods will let employees wear poppies after drawing ire for its earlier ban

Airlines lure customers with 'bait and switch'

Airlines lure customers with 'bait and switch'
Instead, the Oshawa, Ont., duo say they and their 84 guests are out more than $216,000 after their Sunwing Airlines vacation package was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Airlines lure customers with 'bait and switch'

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods
In a decision today, the top court says Maple Leaf Foods did not owe the submarine sandwich outlets a duty of care under the law.

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO
Based on the budget officer's calculations, the government could increase spending, reduce taxes, or a combination of the two to the tune of $19 billion and still reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio over time to pre-pandemic levels.

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO