• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Analysis-Huawei CFO’s admissions won’t help U.S. in its case against the company -legal experts

September 28, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 28, 2021

By Karen Freifeld

(Reuters) – The admission by Huawei’s chief financial officer that she misled a bank about the company’s business dealings in Iran likely won’t help the United States as it continues to prosecute Huawei for the same charges.

While Meng Wanzhou’s admissions last week https://ift.tt/2W88hJg go to the heart of the financial fraud charges, legal experts say it will be difficult and perhaps impossible for prosecutors to use them against Huawei Technologies Co Ltd at trial.

And if the government were to try to use her admissions as leverage in any negotiations aimed at avoiding a trial, experts said, Huawei would likely say what she admitted was the result of extortion, or even a fabrication.

A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in Brooklyn declined to comment, as did a Huawei spokeswoman.

A U.S. judge in Brooklyn on Friday accepted a deferred prosecution agreement between Meng and U.S. prosecutors to end the case against her. Meng appeared via video from Canada, where she had been fighting extradition since her arrest in 2018 on a U.S. warrant.

Meng’s arrest was a key source of discord between Beijing and Washington https://ift.tt/3idcoMd, and also had repercussions for Canada. Within hours of the U.S. agreement and Meng’s release, two Canadians who were detained shortly after Meng was taken into custody were freed from Chinese jails and flown home.

As part of the agreement, Meng acknowledged that Huawei controlled a company that operated in Iran, that its employees were Huawei employees, and that she had made false statements about the company at a 2013 meeting with an executive at a global bank, earlier reported as HSBC Holdings PLC.

CROSS-EXAMINATION

The statement of facts laid out in the agreement could be seen as an admission by a high-level officer of Huawei, said Roland Riopelle, a New York white-collar defense lawyer not involved in Meng’s case, “but if she is not available for cross-examination, it is almost certainly not admissible.”

Meng https://ift.tt/3AHraBR flew home to China on Friday and is unlikely to return to the United States to help the government in its case against the company founded by her father, Ren Zhengfei.

In other cases, prosecutors typically call individuals like Meng to the witness stand to testify about their agreements with the government. But if Meng does not appear in court, Huawei cannot exercise its right to confront her as provided by the 6th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. “If she does not come back, and no one has the opportunity to cross-examine her, it is inadmissible,” said Charles Stillman, another New York defense lawyer.

The statement of facts identified Skycom Tech Co Ltd as a Hong Kong company that operated in Iran but was controlled by Huawei. It noted that Skycom was not a business partner, as Meng had claimed, and that Meng had falsely stated Huawei operated in compliance with applicable laws, regulations and sanctions.

Prosecutors said the deception by Meng and colleagues was intended to obtain banking services from global financial institutions in violation of U.S. sanctions against Iran.

The statement of facts also could be raised by the U.S. Department of Justice in talks with the company’s lawyers in an effort to avoid trial, experts said, even if it would not be allowed in as evidence.Washington lawyer Juan Morillo, who often handles high-profile white collar and cross-border cases, said it “gives them some additional leverage in negotiations with Huawei.”

But Morillo said the company could argue Meng’s agreement was also the “product of extortion” because she may have felt forced to sign it to gain her freedom. So ultimately, he said, the value would be minimal.

Huawei can also note that it did not sign the agreement and is not bound by it. In fact, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson on Saturday said “the so-called ‘fraud’ charges against” Meng were “purely fabricated.” “I’ve been in cases similar to this, and that’s what the strategy is going to be with Huawei,” said Morillo. “They’ll say, ‘This is a fabrication. This is the product of extortion and it has no binding effect on us at all.’”

Huawei faces wire fraud, bank fraud and conspiracy charges that included Meng. It also faces other charges, including for violating sanctions on Iran, obstructing justice, and conspiring to steal trade secrets from U.S. technology companies. It has pleaded not guilty.

(Reporting by Karen Freifeld in New York; editing by Chris Sanders and Lincoln Feast)

Source Link Analysis-Huawei CFO’s admissions won’t help U.S. in its case against the company -legal experts

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Remote learning is setting back millions of South Asian children – UNICEF
  2. France says UK must stick to commitments on migrant crossings
  3. FOMC teases start of taper “soon”
  4. Swimming-Ledecky to serve as volunteer swim coach at University of Florida

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • What Are The White Stripes You Find On Chicken Breasts?
  • The Biggest Explosion Event Since The Big Bang, Dead Sea Scrolls May Have Been Written By Original Authors Of The Bible, And Much More This Week
  • The Strange “Egg-Laying” Rockfaces Of Planet Earth
  • One Of The World’s Largest And Rarest “Fancy Red” Diamonds Has Been Studied For The First Time
  • The Simple Rule That Seems To Govern How Life Is Organized On Earth
  • This Paradisiacal Island In The Philippines Had Advanced Maritime Culture 35,000 Years Ago
  • Neanderthals Faced A Catastrophic Population Collapse 110,000 Years Ago
  • Why Travelers Are Putting Their Luggage In Hotel Bathtubs
  • NSFW Video Shows Two Male Gray Whales Seemingly Having Sex
  • Space Explosions, Dead Sea Scrolls, And Why It’s So Hard To Sex A Dino
  • This Image Of Earth (And Saturn) Will Change You
  • Watch Inquisitive Humpback Whales Blow Bubble Rings At Whale Watchers
  • How Long Did Neanderthals Live For?
  • Want To Use Dragons As Dice? Now You Can, Thanks To Math
  • Why Did Humans Start Using Fire? New Theory Suggests It Wasn’t To Cook Food
  • Controversial “Alien’s Math” Has A New Translator. Can He Reform Its Reputation?
  • How To Watch A Rare Daytime Meteor Shower This Weekend
  • Over 250 Years After Captain Cook Arrived In Australia, Final Resting Place Of HMS Endeavour Confirmed
  • Over 1 Trillion Dollars’ Worth Of Precious Metals Are Hiding In Lunar Craters, Study Suggests
  • What Happened To Marco Siffredi? The First Person To Snowboard Down Mount Everest
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version