Huawei CFO’s admissions can be used at criminal trial, US judge rules

by | Jun 17, 2026 | World

CFO Meng Wanzhou said in 2021 that Huawei illegally conducted business in Iran.By ReutersPublished On 17 Jun 202617 Jun 2026A top Huawei executive’s admission that the Chinese telecom company illegally conducted business in Iran can be used in the upcoming US trial against Huawei, a US judge has ruled.The ruling was filed in Brooklyn federal court on Tuesday.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemsend of listThe company’s chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, made the admission as part of a 2021 deal to dismiss the criminal charges she faced in the case. She had been accused of bank fraud in the US in connection with violating sanctions on Iran. In a four-page statement of facts, Meng acknowledged lying to a financial institution about Huawei’s compliance with sanctions and export control law.“Meng was — and is still — Huawei Tech’s CFO,” US District Judge Ann Donnelly wrote. “Huawei Tech should not be able to object that admitting the statement of its senior executive about her conduct in connection with her job — which Huawei Tech adopted — violates Huawei Tech’s rights.”Donnelly rejected Huawei’s argument that prosecutors could not use Meng’s admission against it because the company was entitled to remain silent despite her statement. The judge also said it was unnecessary for Huawei to question her at trial.A Huawei spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Fractured relations with ChinaMeng, whose father, Ren Zhengfei, founded Huawei, made worldwide headlines in 2018 when she was arrested on a US warrant after landing in Vancouver, straining both US-China and China-Canada relations.The warrant was filed after a sealed indictment accused her and the company of bank fraud for misleading HSBC and other ba …

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