U.S. levels 13 charges against Huawei for stealing secrets, evading sanctions
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Justice laid out its case Monday against Canada’s most famous corporate detainee, unsealing 13 criminal counts of conspiracy, fraud and obstruction against Chinese tech juggernaut Huawei Technologies and arrested telecom scion Meng Wanzhou.
The indictment, based on 23 grand jury allegations, accuses Huawei and Meng — the company’s chief financial officer and daughter of its founder — of misrepresenting their ownership of a Hong Kong-based subsidiary between 2007 and 2017 to circumvent U.S. sanctions against Iran. The company’s U.S. branch is also accused of stealing trade secrets and equipment from cellphone provider T-Mobile USA.
And it was unsealed on the very day that the Trump administration announced new high-level trade talks with China, fuelling questions about whether the two are linked — questions the White House batted down.
Canada’s Department of Justice confirmed late Monday that officials had received the formal request from the United States for Meng’s extradition. Her case is scheduled to return to B.C. Supreme Court on Tuesday.