孟晚舟引渡案: 2018年12月1日被拘捕;2019年3月1日,加正式启动引渡程序;BC最高法院引渡听证2021年8月18日结束,法官未作出裁决;9月24日孟晚舟与美国政府达成协议,美国撤销引渡请求,BC法院终止引渡程序; 2022年12月1日美国撤销指控

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遭CBSA扣押的孟晚舟手提電腦。法庭文件

華為副董事長兼首席財務官孟晚舟終止引渡法庭聆訊,周三控方完成陳述。控方繼續說明美國聯邦調查局(FBI)、加拿大邊境服務局(CBSA)及騎警,從未串謀拘捕行動。不過,法官多次打斷控方陳述詢問細節,指出控方在證明孟晚舟被拘捕前後未遭濫用權力時「推論有缺陷」。法官還就騎警未要求獲得孟晚舟電子設備密碼;密碼被錯誤交給騎警;可防止遙控消除信息聚酯薄膜(mylar)袋子由騎警提供以存放孟晚舟手機等,要求控方更詳細說明。

孟晚舟周三身穿黑色裙裝及淺棕色大衣出庭,法庭聆訊只進行半日便結束,孟晚舟的律師團隊表示需要利用周三下午研究控方本周的陳述,並準備在周四開庭時做出回應。

代表加拿大司法部及美國的律師卡斯利(John Gibb-Carsley)指出,沒有證據顯示FBI或者加國騎警指示CBSA對孟晚舟進行檢查,或者準備盤問的問題。他說,警方行使拘捕時要謹慎考慮並作出判斷,孟晚舟律師團隊聲稱她的憲法權利被侵犯,採取的是敘述故事的方式,在大量的證據資料中,辯方所提出的唯一有事實根據的證據,就是CBSA向騎警提供了孟晚舟電子設備密碼。

卡斯利說:「他們(騎警)從未要求獲得密碼,密碼被錯誤提供,密碼從未被使用,也永遠不會被使用。」他還表示,孟晚舟律師提交給法庭的報告,也支持了密碼未被使用的結論。

卡斯利指出,FBI在孟晚舟被拘捕後,曾發電郵給CBSA要求獲得盤問孟晚舟口供,但CBSA回覆稱只能提供孟晚舟以往出入加拿大的紀錄,如要獲得盤問孟晚舟的口供,FBI只能通過加美法律互助協議提出申請。卡斯利說,CBSA拒絕了美方的要求,證實了CBSA與美方及加國騎警沒有串謀,而是在獨立履行職責。

不過,法官霍姆斯(Heather Holmes)對控方的陳述提出了多個問題及質疑,她仔細詢問密碼由CBSA交給騎警如何發生,以及CBSA何時發現這一錯誤。卡斯利表示,該密碼是在去年12月6日向法庭提交證據清單中的一項,據此估計錯誤被發現應在該日期以後。霍姆斯還問如何證實密碼未被使用,卡斯利回答說無法明確證實,但表示沒有證據顯示曾被使用。

對於卡斯利所說騎警沒有提出獲得密碼要求,但此後騎警又被錯誤地提供了密碼,霍姆斯表示難以確定該結論是否為事實。霍姆斯由此指出,控方依賴「推論有缺陷」來反駁辯方並無幫助,也指出這些缺陷很多情況下可以很容易被修補。

孟晚舟電子設備密碼是控辯雙方法庭激烈爭論焦點之一,控方周二首次承認,CBSA將密碼交給騎警是錯誤行為,並指出CBSA此後發現該錯誤,立即要求騎警歸還密碼。不過騎警回覆稱,該密碼已經呈遞給法官用作呈堂證供。

霍姆斯指出,CBSA用來存放孟晚舟手機的聚酯薄膜袋子是由騎警提供的,而這與美方的要求一致,並詢問為何該袋子會由騎警提供。卡斯利說,如果騎警沒有提醒CBSA官員,作為重要物證的手機信息必須被保護以避免遭人刪除,對於警方來說就是失職。
 
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It's one error. But does it point to a greater pattern?

A B.C. Supreme Court judge pondered the importance of a Canada Border Services Agency mistake Wednesday as she tried to decide how the misstep might fit into a conspiracy theory alleged by Meng Wanzhou's lawyers.

Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes repeatedly interrupted a lawyer for the Crown as he tried to minimize the significance of border officers giving the Huawei executive's phone passcodes to RCMP in error.

The mistake first emerged as an issue on Tuesday.

Meng's lawyers claim the CBSA and RCMP conspired with the FBI to "trick" Meng into volunteering information during a customs examination before she was officially arrested after landing at Vancouver's airport in December 2018.

Crown attorney John Gibb-Carsley said the passcode mistake needed to be viewed in the context of a larger set of events during which Canadian authorities acted entirely appropriately.

"I'm reminded of the old adage: 'Never let the truth get in the way of a good story,'" Gibb-Carsley told Holmes as he wrapped up the Crown's case.

The problem with the defence's theory of the case, he said: "The truth gets in the way of their story."

Alleged U.S. sanctions violation
Meng's lawyers want Holmes to order the disclosure of a wide variety of documents and records they believe will bolster an argument that Meng's rights were violated in the hours prior to her arrest.

The 47-year-old is facing possible extradition to the United States for allegedly violating U.S. sanctions against Iran.

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This phone is one of two seized from Meng when she landed at Vancouver's airport in December 2018. CBSA officers asked her for the passcodes and later passed the codes on to RCMP. (B.C. Supreme Court)

She's accused of lying to banks about the nature of Huawei's relationship with a company in Tehran that was attempting to sell U.S. telecommunications equipment in violation of American sanctions.

Huawei claimed the company, Skycom, was a "local partner." But U.S. prosecutors claim the firm was actually a hidden subsidiary.

Sitting alongside her counsel, Meng has listened intently to arguments put forward by both defence and lawyers for Canada's attorney general.

But the issue of the phone passcodes has proven thorny.

'Inferences from absences'
Border officers seized the phones along with Meng's laptop and tablet when she emerged onto the jetway after flying into YVR from Hong Kong.

The FBI had suggested to RCMP the previous day that the devices be placed in Mylar bags to prevent them from being remotely wiped.

The Crown has argued that the border officers were just doing their job in determining if Meng was admissible to Canada. They say no one has ever actually searched the phones, which the FBI no longer even want.


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CBSA officers asked Meng for the passcodes for her phones when they seized her electronic devices. They later passed those codes in error to the RCMP. (B.C. Supreme Court)

But as she considered the facts, Holmes kept returning to the phones.

If the FBI didn't ask the CBSA to seize them, and the CBSA officers were supposedly acting independently, why were the Mylar bags used?

And if the border agents claim that they got the passcodes as part of the process of examining Meng's goods for evidence of criminality, why didn't they search them?

"We're in a situation where we're being asked to draw inferences from absences," Holmes told Gibb-Carsley.

"Since we're in the land of inferences because of the absence of evidence ... we have the fact that the passcodes were given along with the devices that CBSA took on the jetway and put in Mylar bags, and we have the fact that the U.S. request was for exactly that."

From Meng to Bambi
In making their case, the Crown lawyers also drew on precedent set by one of Canada's most colourful fugitives — Lawrencia 'Bambi' Bembenek, a former Playboy Bunny and police officer who fled north in 1990 after escaping the U.S. prison where she was serving time for killing her husband's ex-wife.

In that case, Canadian immigration officials were accused of using deportation proceedings as a disguised form of extradition.


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Lawrencia 'Bambi' Bembenek was a famous fugitive who returned to the U.S. after capture in Canada. While she was here, she set a legal precedent cited by Crown attorneys who are fighting Meng Wanzhou. (The Canadian Press)

Likewise, Meng's lawyers claim that the CBSA search and questioning of Meng was just a pretence for a "covert criminal investigation."

In the Bembenek case, a judge found that immigration officials were acting in good faith in their efforts to deport a convicted killer.

Gibb-Carsley said the officers who dealt with Meng also had a legitimate purpose in guarding the border.

Like Meng, Bembenek's arrest in Canada drew media from around the world, resulting in a cottage industry of Run Bambi Run T-shirts and at least one TV movie, starring Tatum O'Neal.

But the similarities end there.

After fighting extradition, Bembenek returned to Wisconsin willingly in 1992.

Her original conviction was set aside when mistakes were found in the investigation. She pleaded no contest to second degree murder and was released on probation.

Bembenek moved to Washington state in the late 1990s to be with her parents.

She died of liver failure in 2010.



看过电影Run Bambi Run,她的案子有很多疑点,她被抓后,不少人示威支持她,一个证据是在她家马桶里发现丢弃的假发,她的律师辩护说,任何青春期之后的女孩都知道很多东西是不可以丢入马桶了,显然是有人栽赃。
youtube 下的一个留言:
Muirmaiden 8 years ago
I hope she's resting in peace. DNA evidence proved it was a man who killed Christine Schultz. Bembenek was framed.
 
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meng-laptop.jpg


遭CBSA扣押的孟晚舟手提電腦。法庭文件

華為副董事長兼首席財務官孟晚舟終止引渡法庭聆訊,周三控方完成陳述。控方繼續說明美國聯邦調查局(FBI)、加拿大邊境服務局(CBSA)及騎警,從未串謀拘捕行動。不過,法官多次打斷控方陳述詢問細節,指出控方在證明孟晚舟被拘捕前後未遭濫用權力時「推論有缺陷」。法官還就騎警未要求獲得孟晚舟電子設備密碼;密碼被錯誤交給騎警;可防止遙控消除信息聚酯薄膜(mylar)袋子由騎警提供以存放孟晚舟手機等,要求控方更詳細說明。

孟晚舟周三身穿黑色裙裝及淺棕色大衣出庭,法庭聆訊只進行半日便結束,孟晚舟的律師團隊表示需要利用周三下午研究控方本周的陳述,並準備在周四開庭時做出回應。

代表加拿大司法部及美國的律師卡斯利(John Gibb-Carsley)指出,沒有證據顯示FBI或者加國騎警指示CBSA對孟晚舟進行檢查,或者準備盤問的問題。他說,警方行使拘捕時要謹慎考慮並作出判斷,孟晚舟律師團隊聲稱她的憲法權利被侵犯,採取的是敘述故事的方式,在大量的證據資料中,辯方所提出的唯一有事實根據的證據,就是CBSA向騎警提供了孟晚舟電子設備密碼。

卡斯利說:「他們(騎警)從未要求獲得密碼,密碼被錯誤提供,密碼從未被使用,也永遠不會被使用。」他還表示,孟晚舟律師提交給法庭的報告,也支持了密碼未被使用的結論。

卡斯利指出,FBI在孟晚舟被拘捕後,曾發電郵給CBSA要求獲得盤問孟晚舟口供,但CBSA回覆稱只能提供孟晚舟以往出入加拿大的紀錄,如要獲得盤問孟晚舟的口供,FBI只能通過加美法律互助協議提出申請。卡斯利說,CBSA拒絕了美方的要求,證實了CBSA與美方及加國騎警沒有串謀,而是在獨立履行職責。

不過,法官霍姆斯(Heather Holmes)對控方的陳述提出了多個問題及質疑,她仔細詢問密碼由CBSA交給騎警如何發生,以及CBSA何時發現這一錯誤。卡斯利表示,該密碼是在去年12月6日向法庭提交證據清單中的一項,據此估計錯誤被發現應在該日期以後。霍姆斯還問如何證實密碼未被使用,卡斯利回答說無法明確證實,但表示沒有證據顯示曾被使用。

對於卡斯利所說騎警沒有提出獲得密碼要求,但此後騎警又被錯誤地提供了密碼,霍姆斯表示難以確定該結論是否為事實。霍姆斯由此指出,控方依賴「推論有缺陷」來反駁辯方並無幫助,也指出這些缺陷很多情況下可以很容易被修補。

孟晚舟電子設備密碼是控辯雙方法庭激烈爭論焦點之一,控方周二首次承認,CBSA將密碼交給騎警是錯誤行為,並指出CBSA此後發現該錯誤,立即要求騎警歸還密碼。不過騎警回覆稱,該密碼已經呈遞給法官用作呈堂證供。

霍姆斯指出,CBSA用來存放孟晚舟手機的聚酯薄膜袋子是由騎警提供的,而這與美方的要求一致,並詢問為何該袋子會由騎警提供。卡斯利說,如果騎警沒有提醒CBSA官員,作為重要物證的手機信息必須被保護以避免遭人刪除,對於警方來說就是失職。
CBSA和RCMP开始踢皮球了?当法官是SB?
 
法官下面问的问题还是蛮尖锐的:

If the FBI didn't ask the CBSA to seize them, and the CBSA officers were supposedly acting independently, why were the Mylar bags used?

And if the border agents claim that they got the passcodes as part of the process of examining Meng's goods for evidence of criminality, why didn't they search them?
 
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The Canadian Press
Published Thursday, October 3, 2019 2:42PM EDT

VANCOUVER - A lawyer for Huawei Technologies executive Meng Wanzhou says the RCMP illegally passed on serial numbers and other crucial identifying details of her cellphones, laptop and tablet to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Scott Fenton says Mounties provided technical information that enables U.S. authorities to find out calls made and received, phone numbers, time and duration of calls and the physical location of cell towers where the calls were connected.

Meng's lawyers are in British Columbia Supreme Court seeking documents that they believe would prove allegations that American and Canadian officials conspired to conduct a "covert criminal investigation" at Vancouver's airport.

The United States is seeking Meng's extradition on fraud charges linked to alleged violations of sanctions against Iran, which both she and Huawei deny.

She was arrested during a stopover at the Vancouver International Airport on Dec. 1, 2018.

Lawyers for the Canadian government argued this week that there is no indication of improper evidence sharing between the FBI, RCMP and Canada Border Services Agency.
 
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“Meng was tricked,” Scott Fenton, one of her lawyers, told the court, laying out how the Canada Border Services Agency, police and the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation unlawfully used the pretext of an immigration check to get Meng to disclose evidence that could be used against her.

According to defence testimony, Meng’s warrant called for her “immediate” arrest, yet border officials detained her first for three hours, ostensibly to determine if she was admissible to Canada. However:

There was never any chance Meng would have been turned away, given the arrest warrant awaiting her.

Officials never formally admitted her anyway — her immigration status in Canada remains in limbo.

They also never told her why she was being questioned. Only when arrested hours later was she advised of her right to remain silent.

Border officials say they weren’t cooperating with police or the Federal Bureau of Investigations, yet:

They questioned her about Huawei’s business in Iran. Unbeknownst to Meng, the U.S. extradition request — based on an indictment still sealed at that time — accused her of fraud related to sanctions on Iran.

They placed her devices in special bags to prevent them from being tampered with remotely — a specific request from the FBI and not a standard border procedure.

They gave the passwords to all her devices to police. A CBSA official later said the passwords “were provided in error” and couldn’t be used as evidence, according to an email exhibit.

Crown lawyer John Gibb-Carsley tried to explain these points away Wednesday, saying “there’s no evidence it was all done for nefarious purposes.” Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes, the presiding judge, often seemed skeptical, grilling the prosecution.

Meng seeks a court order to force the Canadian government to release more details about her arrest. Holmes is expected to issue a decision after disclosure hearings wrap up Thursday. Ultimately, the defence is seeking to establish an abuse of process. If it’s successful, the court could halt the extradition proceedings.

Long Odds
For Meng, these are the first steps in a long battle in which the odds are stacked against her. Of the 798 U.S. extradition requests received since 2008, Canada has only refused or discharged eight, according to Canada’s Department of Justice.

Still, she’s approaching the first legal test with flair. The executive — who wore an Abercrombie & Fitch hoodie in her mug shot and preferred yoga pants and sneakers at earlier proceedings — has shown up daily in four-inch stilettos and designer dresses flaunting the GPS tracker on her left ankle.

Meng, who used to scurry to her car with a wool cap pulled low over her eyes, now strides each morning out the gates of her $13 million (US$9.8 million) property — coat off despite the chill — allowing photographers to take pictures of her. She stopped for her first interview with a Chinese-language TV crew to remark on the 70th anniversary of Communist Party rule.

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An ankle monitor is seen on Huawei Chief Financial Officer, Meng Wanzhou as she leaves her Vancouver home to appear in British Columbia Supreme Court in Vancouver on Sept. 30, 2019. Don MacKinnon/AFP/Getty Images

There’s a certain irony in the glamour offensive. Two Canadians detained in China within days of Meng’s arrest, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, are being held in isolation with only sporadic access to consular officials. Meng’s arrest and the detentions of Kovrig and Spavor have plunged the relationship between Canada and its second-biggest trading partner into its darkest period since diplomatic ties were established in 1970 — with almost no hope of a detente.

Meanwhile, for a woman who was virtually unknown until her arrest, despite being the eldest daughter of Huawei’s billionaire founder Ren Zhengfei, the case continues to offer glimpses into Meng’s persona and life: until December, she’d never had any run-in with the law, not even a traffic violation. In addition to the two Vancouver homes, she has two in Hong Kong, one in Shenzhen and three in London, which she rents out. She’s a titan of business with a penchant for accessorizing just about everything: a Winnie-the-Pooh sticker on her iPad, a pastel puffball on her backpack, even a cherry blossom charm on her USB stick.

Meng’s high-profile case brings to the fore growing criticism that Canada’s border agency operates amid scant oversight and outdated laws. In June, and Ontario court censured the CBSA for its “serious, longstanding and systemic” approach to searching electronic devices.

A December 2017 report by the parliamentary ethics committee criticized how the agency treats such devices in the same way it inspects a bag of underwear, and called for new laws on device searches at borders. “They say they don’t, but the law, if applied as they say it is, would allow them to do it on a whim. We say this is likely unconstitutional,” David Fraser, a privacy lawyer representing the Canadian Bar Association, told the committee.
 
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Meng Wanzhou's legal team levelled a potentially explosive allegation against the RCMP on Thursday, accusing officers of sharing technical information about the Huawei executive's phone with the FBI, in violation of the Extradition Act.

If proven true, defence lawyer Scott Fenton said the provision to U.S. authorities of details including serial numbers and SIM card information would mark an "unlawful" attempt by the agencies to do an end-run around the legal process.

The allegation threw a wrench into a hearing that was supposed to end this week, as B.C. Supreme Court Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes instead directed Crown attorneys to produce affidavits they claim will prove the information sharing didn't happen.

Meng's lawyers are seeking documents to bolster their claim the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), RCMP and FBI conspired to conduct a "covert criminal investigation" against the Huawei chief financial officer.

Fenton said the FBI would normally have to go through a judge or an international treaty to get Meng's phone details.

And even the technical information would have been of value to them.

"It's very significant, because U.S. law enforcement, as part of their tool kit, can make significant use of this technical information regarding electronic devices," he told Holmes.

"It closes the loop. A request was made; the request was honoured."

Meng faces extradition to the United States for allegedly misleading banks about Huawei's relationship with a hidden subsidiary accused of attempting to sell U.S. telecommunications equipment in Tehran.

American prosecutors claim Meng's alleged lies put the banks who cleared transactions for Huawei at risk of violating U.S. sanctions against Iran.

meng-wanzhou.jpg

Meng is out on bail and under the watchful eye of the security guards who follow her around the clock. They stand guard as she emerges from a vehicle outside B.C. Supreme Court. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

Meng has been living in one of two multi-million dollar homes she owns in Vancouver since she was released on $10 million bail in the weeks after her arrest.

As part of her release, she wears a GPS monitoring bracelet on her ankle and is watched by bodyguards around the clock.

She has denied the allegations.

Her extradition hearing is set to begin in January, but her lawyers were in court for the past two weeks trying to convince Holmes to give them an order for records related to what they claim is an abuse of process at the time of Meng's arrest.

'Not meaningless information'
The 47-year-old's electronic devices took centre stage in the fifth-floor courtroom in the past few days as Meng's lawyers painted a picture that began with an FBI request to seize her phones, laptop and tablet at the time of her arrest.

The FBI wanted the devices placed in signal-proof Mylar bags to prevent them being remotely wiped.

The CBSA detained and questioned Meng for three hours before handing her over to the RCMP for her official arrest. In doing so, the border officers seized and bagged the phones.

They also compelled Meng to give them the passcodes.

But the Crown claimed that none of that happened at the behest of the FBI.

This week, the Crown revealed that border officers later provided the passcodes to the RCMP in error.


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Border officials seized Meng's phones when she arrived in Vancouver and later passed them on to the RCMP. Her lawyers claim the RCMP shared technical information about the devices with the FBI. (B.C. Supreme Court)


They were never used, and the Crown claims the CBSA was just doing its job in seizing them in the first place.

But Fenton said the FBI was clearly interested in the phones from the start.

And as Meng's lawyers combed through notes and emails of RCMP officers provided this week by the Crown, he said they found documents to suggest "significant evidence sharing."

meng-wanzhou-passcodes.JPG

CBSA officers asked Meng for the passcodes for her phones when they seized her electronic devices. They later passed those codes in error to the RCMP. (B.C. Supreme Court)

The FBI has since said it no longer wants the devices, a move Fenton called "damage control."

He claimed investigators could have already used the technical information to determine details about calls, text messages and Meng's movements.

"This is not meaningless information," Fenton told Holmes.

"It's the use of the CBSA's powers to gather information for the RCMP as requested ... and now — today — we know that significant information was sent to the FBI."

'We believe it's not a fact'
But lawyers for Canada's attorney general insisted that the RCMP had not shared information from Meng's electronic devices with the FBI.

Crown attorney Robert Frater said Fenton's accusation was wrong.

"We can show that in fact, it was not shared with the FBI," he told Holmes.

"'[Fenton] says it's a very serious allegation — and we believe it's not a fact."

The Crown lawyers spent the lunch hour gathering emails from RCMP officers who said they had not sent the phone details to the FBI.

But Fenton called the emails hearsay and said the defence team has "grave concerns" the information in them was not correct.

That left Holmes with a conundrum.

She was supposed to determine whether there was "an air of reality" to the defence's conspiracy allegations but didn't want to appear to be putting an "artificial" stop to the introduction of new evidence.

In the end, she issued an order for "affidavits based on personal knowledge attaching any relevant records relating to the sharing of information with the FBI from Ms. Meng's electronic devices" from six RCMP officers.

The Crown has until next Wednesday to produce those records, after which Meng's lawyers have a week to determine if they will need to cross-examine any of the officers further.

Holmes won't be able to reach a decision in relation to the request for more records until that process is over.

Meng will have been in Canada for a year at the start of December.
 
孟晚舟被拘現「程序錯誤」 加否認受美指使
2019年10月04日 03:12


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  (星島日報報道) 中國電訊設備商華為副董事長孟晚舟引渡聆訊,當地時間二日繼續在加拿大卑詩省法庭進行。加拿大政府律師在法庭上承認在拘捕孟晚舟的過程雖出現「程序錯誤」,但稱並無惡意,且無證據顯示辯方質疑的美加合謀。

  這是加拿大政府首次承認拘捕孟晚舟過程有「錯誤」。代表政府的控方律師在法庭上表示,加拿大邊境服務局把孟晚舟的手機密碼交予警方過程不妥,但沒證據顯示交予出於惡意。控方同時出示警方紀錄,證明沒有使用得來的密碼,對孟晚舟的手機進行調查。

  該律師還稱,儘管美國聯邦調查局(FBI)與加拿大警方在拘捕孟晚舟前有聯繫,但否認加拿大邊境服務局在溫哥華機場審問孟晚舟是FBI或加警指使,稱邊境局是獨立執法。

  孟晚舟的律師之前已要求加國政府提供相關案件電郵、筆記和其他記錄,稱這些資料證明加國政府有關部門違反了孟晚舟的個人權利。律師表示需要時間審查這些記綠,若加國官員濫用了授權,引渡程序應被暫停。

  華為創始人任正非之女孟晚舟,於去年十二月一日過境溫哥華機場時被加拿大警方因應美方的要求拘捕。美方指控孟晚舟控制的華為子公司和伊朗有生意往來,違返了美國對伊朗的制裁令,並在過程中「詐騙銀行」,要求加拿大將孟晚舟引渡到美國受審。
 
把孟晚舟的密码交给FBI还说没有恶意。
为什么这些政府官员不说实话呢?

诚实,作为老百姓,是一种美德,作为政府官员,是一种要求。
 
把孟晚舟的密码交给FBI还说没有恶意。
为什么这些政府官员不说实话呢?

诚实,作为老百姓,是一种美德,作为政府官员,是一种要求。

重要的是承认错误,如何辩解不重要。

戏得演好。我以为,司法部已想好了退路。
 
把孟晚舟的密码交给FBI还说没有恶意。
为什么这些政府官员不说实话呢?

诚实,作为老百姓,是一种美德,作为政府官员,是一种要求。

哈哈哈,向乌毛这天天做阿Q,也不知道是什么精神
 
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