THERE is no evidence Canadian border officials or police acted improperly when Huawei chief finance officer Meng Wanzhou was arrested at Vancouver's airport nearly 10 months ago, said Canadian Attorney General David Lametti, reported Reuters.
The filing was made available as Meng and her lawyers sought additional disclosures relating to the arrest in British Columbia Supreme Court in Vancouver, including contacts between US and Canadian authorities.
The defence claims Meng was unlawfully searched and questioned under the ruse of an immigration check and is seeking to halt extradition proceedings.
The disclosure hearing is scheduled through last week and to resume on September30 for another five days. Meng's extradition hearing is to start in January.
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The filing was made available as Meng and her lawyers sought additional disclosures relating to the arrest in British Columbia Supreme Court in Vancouver, including contacts between US and Canadian authorities.
The defence claims Meng was unlawfully searched and questioned under the ruse of an immigration check and is seeking to halt extradition proceedings.
The disclosure hearing is scheduled through last week and to resume on September30 for another five days. Meng's extradition hearing is to start in January.
WORLD SHIPPING