Huawei CEO Meng Wanzhou is suing the Canadian government police and the Border Patrol, alleging that she was detained, searched, and questioned before she was notified of her arrest.
According to treatment, Meng was questioned about "an ordinary customs officer" researchand so he was forced to "give evidence and information" without being arrested.
Canadian authorities took her electronic devices and viewed their contents after obtaining the codes access her, the suit claims, without telling her the real reason for her detention.
For those who do not know, the company is facing charges of conspiracy and deception of the United States. Conviction for violating the International Emergency Power Act (IEEPA), money laundering, and impediment to justice.
Huawei faces additional charges in a separate indictment that it conspired to steal intellectual property from T-Mobile and then obstruct justice. The alleged illegal activity occurred in 2012-13 and related to Huawei's attempt to build a bot similar to the one used by T-Mobile to essay mobile phones.
Huawei claims he is not guilty last week in federal charges of T-Mobile's theft of commercial secrets, conspiracies, phone frauds and impediments to justice, according to the US Department of Justice.
If it is guilty, Huawei will be fined $ 5 million, or three times the value of the stolen trade secret, an amount that will be even higher.
In one open letter over the weekend, Huawei's board director Catherine Chen asked the US media not to believe everything they hear about the company.
“Εκ μέρους της Huawei, θα ήθελα να καλέσω τα μέλη των Αμερικάνικων μέσων ενημέρωσης να επισκεφτούν τα campus μας και να συναντήσουν τους υπαλλήλους μας”, δήλωσε η Chen.