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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这位就是脸色发白的Kirkland.他的行为,破坏了加拿大一直宣称的司法独立。

CBSA officer claims Meng Wanzhou was flagged for 'national security' concerns ahead of arrival​

Social Sharing​

Officer also says he was concerned delaying arrest might violate Huawei exec's Charter rights​


Jason Proctor · CBC News · Posted: Oct 28, 2020 6:29 PM PT | Last Updated: October 28

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Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou leaves her home for B.C. Supreme Court under the eye of a security guard earlier this week. The CBSA and RCMP officers involved in Meng's arrest are testifying at a hearing in Vancouver related to her extradition warrant. (Ben Nelms/CBC)
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A Canada Border Services Agency officer involved in questioning Meng Wanzhou says a supervisor told him the Huawei executive had been flagged by the agency's national targeting centre for national security reasons ahead of her arrest in Vancouver in December 2018.

Testifying in B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver Wednesday, border services officer Scott Kirkland didn't elaborate on the exact reasons the chief financial officer had been singled out, but said his own open-source searches led him to believe she might be suspected of espionage.
"Is she working for a company, a firm that's involved in espionage against Canada or another country?" Kirkland said.

The CBSA officer said he saw from news articles that Australia and New Zealand had already banned Huawei equipment at the time of Meng's arrival from Hong Kong on Dec. 1, 2018. And the United Kingdom was thinking of following suit.

"It was a concern," Kirkland said. "Evidently some of our partners and allies already had serious concerns, and I assume some sort of evidence before they would do such a thing."

'Concerns' of possible Charter issues​

Kirkland is one of 10 officers expected to testify over a two-week period about the events leading up to and immediately following Meng's arrest on an extradition warrant to the United States, where she faces charges of fraud and conspiracy.

Meng is accused of lying to an HSBC executive about Huawei's relationship with a subsidiary accused of violating U.S. sanctions against Iran. Prosecutors claim that Meng's alleged lies placed the bank at risk of loss and prosecution for breaching the same set of U.S. sanctions through its financial dealings with the telecommunications giant.

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Canada Border Services Agency officer Scott Kirkland was featured in CBSA promotional material for border services officers. Kirkland is the officer who took possession of Meng Wanzhou's phone when she arrived in Canada. (CBSA/Twitter)

The 48-year-old's lawyers claim Meng's rights were violated on arrival, when a decision was made to have the CBSA question Meng without a lawyer for three hours before her actual arrest.

The testimony given by the RCMP and CBSA officers will be used at a hearing in February at which the defence team plans to argue that the case should be tossed.

Kirkland admitted to having concerns about the impact of any delay on Meng's rights at the time that a colleague first floated the prospect of having the CBSA pull her aside once she got off a plane from Hong Kong.

"I stated that maybe we should just identify and pass on to the RCMP immediately," Kirkland said.

"There was concerns of possible Charter [of Rights and Freedoms] issues being raised if we were going to court ... but at the same time, we also have a job to do."

'We were shocked'​

Kirkland's testimony began after two-and-a-half days of evidence from the RCMP officer who was tasked with the job of arresting Meng.

Const. Winston Yep spent the bulk of his time under gruelling cross-examination, but insisted that the decision to have the CBSA deal with Meng first was a matter of jurisdiction and public safety.

1607546733429.png

This phone was 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 the RCMP. (B.C. Supreme Court)

Kirkland, who said he featured in an episode of the CBSA reality TV show Border Security, spent the first hour of his testimony explaining the inner workings of the agency.

He explained that border services officers had their own concerns about Meng's immigration status and possible criminality separate to those of the RCMP.

After learning about the impending arrest and the national security concern, Kirkland said he saw the fraud charges on the CBSA's own database and learned through news articles what the substance of the allegation was likely to be.

"We were shocked that this was happening," Kirkland said.

"We had serious concerns and we knew that this was going to be a big deal and it was going to be a huge issue."

'I would have grabbed it back'​

The CBSA officer said he accompanied Meng and a colleague to the secondary inspection area where she was questioned about her activities and her thoughts on why she might have been pulled to one side.

Kirkland said he asked Meng for her phones and placed them into the clear bags that had been provided by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation to keep them from being remotely wiped.

He said he later asked her for the numbers attached to the devices as well as the pin codes, which he wrote on a piece of paper.

1607546745857.png

CBSA officer Scott Kirkland asked Meng for the passcodes for her phones when they seized her electronic devices. The codes were later passed in error to the RCMP. (B.C. Supreme Court)

He said he then placed the paper with the information alongside her iPad and USB key and other electronic devices.

At a previous hearing, the Crown admitted that those codes were later passed by mistake to the RCMP. Kirkland said he realized a few days after the arrest that he no longer had the piece of paper with the codes.

"If you had realized at the time that the RCMP was walking away with the passcodes, what would you have done," Crown attorney Diba Majzub asked Kirkland.
"I would have grabbed it back from them," Kirkland responded. "They're not allowed to have them ... because it's a Privacy Act violation."

Kirkland's testimony is expected to continue on Thursday.

Meng, who was in the courtroom, has denied the allegations against her.

 
擦,

破坏了加拿大一直宣称的司法独立?​

这个结论怎么出来的? 粉红色脑细胞?
 
CBSA chief says sharing of Meng's passcodes was 'serious' breach
Passcodes were "accidentally" shared when RCMP took possession of Meng Wanzhou's electronics during the arrest.
5 hours ago


Meng Wanzhou's lawyers to pursue new line of argument for her release
Meng Wanzhou's lawyers allege that she was used as a bargaining chip for political purposes by U.S. President Donald Trump.

1 hours ago

边检chief 说:孟的手机密码被“意外”地(与FBI)共享是“严重”的违规,这个违规共享行为,难道没有破坏加拿大的司法独立吗?需要什么颜色的脑细胞去洗地?司法机构应当独立于政府,政治之外,同样更不应当受制于美国。

没仔细读,孟的律师打算采取什么新的策略为她的案子辩护。这个拖太久,对加拿大会越来越不利。
 
RCMP is not FBI ,ok?
有 CBSA工作人员犯错,为什么会扯到破坏加拿大司法独立? 这脑子是大红的吧?
 
而且退到底讲,个别警员具体操作中的违规或者违法行为,和你党妈无耻的国家机器报复抓人,能相提并论吗?
滚出加拿大吧,回你的国家,跳啊唱啊叫啊去吧
 
无论谁的违规,是加拿大执法人员的违规,反正是密码与FBI共享了。

你接着使劲洗。

我看到相关的报道,还会接着转。愿意住哪里是我的自由,你算什么,管得宽,可惜没用。

2020年12月8日10:39 晚上更新于2 小时前

焦点:加拿大边境官员出庭作证称FBI“执意”索取孟晚舟引渡案信息​

路透新闻部 1 分钟阅读

路透温哥华12月8日 - 一位加拿大边境官员周二在法庭作证时称,两年前华为首席财务官孟晚舟被捕后,美国联邦调查局(FBI)“非常执意地”向加国边境官员索要信息。
 
嘿嘿,老粉红,你们家孟公主就是还不能走,你着急吧,上火吧,心跳加快吧,血压升高吧,没用,哈哈
最后如果交给美国,你会把加拿大护照撕掉吗?
 
我水平有限,没有打赌的爱好。不喜欢屡战屡败。

我就是一个看热闹的,都两年多了,急什么?
 
我水平有限,没有打赌的爱好。不喜欢屡战屡败。

我就是一个看热闹的,都两年多了,急什么?
你骨子里就是成批出品的老粉红一个,跑到加拿大来也真难为您了,敌营18年加拿大版啊
每天勤勤恳恳,忍辱负重,一心向党,发共和国勋章都应该啊
 
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