Status of Huawei CFO's husband questioned as he tries to post bail for wealthy wife - Action News
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British Columbia

Status of Huawei CFO's husband questioned as he tries to post bail for wealthy wife

The embattled CFO of Huawei is expected to learn whether or not she will make bail in Vancouver. The answer may come down to the immigration status of her venture capitalist husband.

Judge seeks clarity on whether Meng Wanzhou's surety needs to live in B.C.

Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou poses with her children with the Lions Gate Bridge in Vancouver as a backdrop in one of a series of photographs filed in B.C. Supreme Court. (B.C. Supreme Court)

What does $15 million mean to the daughter of a Chinese telecom billionaire? And what kind of hold will two Vancouver properties no matter how priceyexert on her husband?

After two days of argument in B.C. Supreme Court, the answers to those questions are likely to prove crucial Tuesday as a judge decides whether or not to grant bail to HuaweiTechnologies chief financial officerMeng Wanzhou.

Justice William Ehrckereserved judgment on a proposal for the 46-year-old's release Monday after a day of arguments stressing the unique nature of a situation resultingin the spectacle of one of China's most powerful women bargaining for her freedom as she awaits possible extradition to the United States for allegedly violating trade sanctions against Iran.

"They could lose 15 million and go on with their life, and their lifestyle wouldn't be appreciably different." Ehrckenoted as he asked questions of Crown and defence lawyers at the end of the day.

"I want all the help that counsel can give me."

'I say that is a serious offence'

According to a summary of facts filed with the court, Meng is accused of repeatedly lying to financial institutions about the relationship between Huawei and a company called Skycomthat did business in Iran in violation of international sanctions.

U.S. prosecutors claim "Huaweioperated Skycom as an unofficial subsidiary to conduct business in Iran while concealingSkycom's link to Huawei."

Meng poses with her family in one of a series of pictures filed in court in support of her bail application. (B.C. Supreme Court)

Meng is the daughter ofHuaweifounderRenZhengfei. She serves as deputy chairwoman of the company's board andserved on the board of Skycomin 2008 and 2009.

As a result of her alleged lies, prosecutors contend that the banks she dealt with were "induced into carrying out transactions that they otherwise would not have contemplated." Those transactions put them on the wrong side of the international community.

"I say that is a serious offence," said federal Crown counsel John Gibb-Carsley. "That's assisting Iran in violation of the sanctions."

'Global interest will be triggered'

From the outset of the bail proceedings last week, Meng's lawyerpredicted that the stature of his client would trigger global interest in the case.

The first appearance happened in a virtually emptycourtroom. CBCNews has listened to a recording of the initial hearing, in which David Martin argued successfully for a temporary publication ban.

He likened the case to the arrest of Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg."That kind of global interest will be triggered," he said.

WatchMeng's bail hearing drawcrowds in Vancouver:

Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou's bail hearing draws crowds, media

6 years ago
Duration 0:42
Here's a glimpse of what the scene looked like outside of the B.C. Supreme Court on December 10, 2018.

A week later, a wall of cameras satatthe steps of the B.C. Supreme Court building in downtown Vancouver. Reporters from New York to Japan have requested accreditation.

The lineup to get inside the secure courtroom built for the Air India trial stretchedbeyond a set of concrete steps to the next floor. Students did homework as they waited.

A man who claimed he graduated from school with Meng askedif he would beable to see her from the gallery. Awoman claimed she once had dinner with Meng; she wasworried about the toll on her health.

'Jailer in the community'

Inside the court, supporters and the curious packed the public gallery. Cellphones rang in violation of court rules as grim-faced sheriffs walked up and down the line telling the crowd not to take pictures.

Meng cuta strange figure whenshe arrivedfrom AlouetteCorrectional Centre for Women in Maple Ridge.

In this courtroom sketch, Meng wears prison green sweats as she sits beside a translator during her bail hearing on Friday. (Jane Wolsak/Canadian Press)

She wore a shapeless green track suit but gave firm orders as she stood to direct an assistant who ran back andforth between the glass-enclosed prisoner's box and the tables holding a team of Meng's high-priced lawyers.

Her husband, venture capitalist XiaozongLiu, sat in the front row of the public gallery a few metres away. A team of Huawei employees surrounded him.

Liu has offered to act as surety, putting upboth his Vancouver homes as well as $1 millionin cash, an amount totalling about $15 million.

But Martin and the judge struggled with the idea of a non-resident acting in a role described as being Meng's"jailer in the community."

'There always has to be a first time'

Gibb-Carsleyalso doubted Liu's ability to act as surety, given that his life like Meng's is almost entirely in China.

He questioned the assertion that the couple has meaningfulties to the local community. And he also noted that many of the photographs the couple filed with the court as proof of their Canadian lives were essentially tourist snaps.

"If Ms. Meng was to flee, Mr. Liu would not be left behind," Gibb-Carsleysaid.

Meng poses with one of her children in a picture she filed with the court. (B.C. Supreme Court)

The plan for Meng'spotential release calls for round-the-clock physical surveillance combined with an electronic ankle monitor using GPS to mark her location. The heads of two security firms testified to the reliability of their products.

But Gibb-Carsleynoted that neither man could guarantee Meng wouldn't escape. He askedthem about the possibility oftheir electronic systems being compromised.

No matter how remote, he later told the judge, the court couldn't discount the possibility Meng might use her vast wealth and unique access to the world's most popular telecommunications technology to evade her captors.

"Is that the risk the court should take?" Gibb-Carsley asked the judge.

"There always has to be a first time," Ehrckequipped.