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Defense alleges abuse of process in Canada arrest of Huawei exec
by Staff Writers
Vancouver (AFP) June 15, 2020

Lawyers for Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou on Monday accused Canadian police and border agents, in collusion with the FBI, of abuse of process in her arrest on a US warrant.

At a British Columbia Supreme Court hearing to set the timetable for extradition hearings, defense lawyer David Martin argued that Canadian officials purposely delayed her arrest by several hours during a December 2018 stopover in Vancouver in order to gather evidence for the FBI.

In court filings, the defense said this "pre-planned scheme" allowed authorities to snoop through her electronic devices under the pretense of a customs inspection.

The court heard previously that the FBI had asked for Meng's devices to be stored in "signal-blocking" bags, which the Canada Border Services Agency did.

The FBI also asked for electronic serial numbers and images of Meng's devices.

The daughter of the billionaire founder of Chinese telecom giant Huawei, Ren Zhengfei, is wanted in the US for fraud linked to Iran sanctions.

Martin called the US extradition request "an extravagant extraterritorial jurisdictional reach."

He pointed to a Canadian Security Intelligence Service memo outlining that the FBI would not be present at Meng's arrest "in order to avoid the perception of influence" as proof that CSIS was "conscious of obscuring the involvement of the FBI."

The heavily-redacted memo was released by a federal court on Friday.

In it, CSIS warned that Meng's arrest would be "highly political" and likely to "send shock waves around the world."

It would also certainly become "a significant bilateral issue" for Canada and China, it said.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a daily briefing the memo "shows once again that the whole Meng Wanzhou case is a serious political incident."

"It speaks volumes about the US political calculations to purposefully suppress Huawei and other Chinese high-tech companies," Zhao said, adding that Canada had acted as an "accomplice."

"We once again urge Canada to take China's solemn position and concerns seriously, immediately release Meng and ensure her safe return to China, and not to go further down the wrong path," he said.


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Microsoft joins rivals, bars police use of face recognition tech
Washington (AFP) June 11, 2020
Microsoft on Thursday joined its Big Tech rivals in announcing it would bar law enforcement from using its facial recognition tools in the absence of government regulations. Microsoft president Brad Smith told a Washington Post event that the company has not sold its technology to police in the United States, and would maintain that policy until there are laws in place "grounded in human rights." The comments follow similar moves by Amazon and IBM and come as activists press tech firms to curb d ... read more

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