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Chief Financial Officer of Huawei Meng Wanzhou leaves her home in Vancouver, Wednesday, November 18, 2020. Wanzhou is heading to the British Columbia Supreme Court in a evidentiary hearing on her extradition case on abuse of process argument.JONATHAN HAYWARD/The Canadian Press

Lawyers for Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou probed a Canadian border official in court on Wednesday about his agency’s communications with U.S. and Canadian authorities ahead of Ms. Meng’s arrest two years ago.

Defence lawyer Mona Duckett questioned Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officer Sanjit Dhillon about whether he purposely concealed from Ms. Meng that there was an arrest warrant out for her from the United States when he questioned her before she was arrested, “as the RCMP [Royal Canadian Mounted Police] instructed.”

“No, the RCMP didn’t instruct me to do anything that day,” Mr. Dhillon said, adding that “I didn’t have a strategy, I was having a conversation with her” during his interrogation of Ms. Meng.

Hearings in British Columbia Supreme Court this week and next week consist of witness testimony, from officials in the CBSA and RCMP, regarding their conduct during Ms. Meng’s initial investigation and arrest.

Huawei’s legal team has argued that U.S. and Canadian authorities illegally co-ordinated ahead of Ms. Meng’s arrest at Vancouver International Airport on a warrant from the U.S., invalidating her extradition.

Ms. Meng, 48, was arrested in December, 2018, at Vancouver International Airport by Canadian police while on a layover bound for Mexico. She is facing charges of bank fraud for allegedly misleading HSBC about Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd.’s business dealings in Iran, causing the bank to break U.S. sanctions.

Ms. Meng has said she is innocent and is fighting the extradition from under house arrest in Vancouver, where she owns a home in an upscale neighbourhood in the Pacific coastal city.

Mr. Dhillon also pushed back on Ms. Duckett’s assertion that he made sure identifying details about Ms. Meng’s electronic devices were gathered at the request of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

On Tuesday, Mr. Dhillon told the court he had received an e-mail from an FBI official with a request for information relating to the CBSA’s investigation of Ms. Meng before her arrest, but said he did not act on the request.

Ms. Meng’s arrest has soured diplomatic relations between Ottawa and Beijing. Soon after her detention, China arrested Canadian citizens Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig on espionage charges. The two men are still in detention.

Ms. Meng’s case is set to wrap up in April, 2021, although the potential for appeals by either side mean the case could drag on for years.

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