William Majcher is pictured outside B.C. Supreme Court, in Vancouver, where his trial got underway on Monday, April 20, 2026. Majcher, a former RCMP officer, has pleaded not guilty to a charge under Canada's Security of Information Act. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Brenna Owen

B.C. court hears Chinese police went ‘missing’ for hours during trip to Vancouver

Apr 21, 2026 | 1:38 PM

VANCOUVER — British Columbia’s Supreme Court heard Tuesday that three Chinese police officials went “missing” for six hours during an RCMP-escorted visit to Vancouver in 2018, setting off concerns they could be trying to illicitly repatriate someone.

The revelation came during testimony by RCMP Supt. Peter Tsui at the trial of William Majcher, a former RCMP officer who has pleaded not guilty to a security offence in relation to his alleged work for the Chinese government.

Tsui said he had helped facilitate the visit by the delegation from the Chinese Ministry of Public Security during his time as a liaison officer stationed in Beijing.

He said it involved 22 Chinese officials split between Toronto and Vancouver who were being “hosted” by Canadian police as they worked on “mutual files” related to market fraud, money laundering and “economic fugitives” over about nine days.

But Tsui said three of about 14 officers visiting Vancouver failed to show up to a meeting and instead went missing, with RCMP having “no idea” where they went.

“As we transitioned from Toronto to Vancouver to start our second series of meetings for the files that were in (B.C.), one of the investigative teams was not at our allocated or designated meeting times for presentations,” he said.

Tsui told the court the “safeguards” were put in place “at the borders and at the airports because there (were) certain individuals in Vancouver that we were concerned about being returned to (China).”

It had taken significant negotiation to arrange the trip and the incident affected “police-to-police trust” between authorities in the two countries, he said, adding the RCMP had repeatedly told Chinese police they could not operate in Canada.

Tsui’s testimony came on the second day of Majcher’s trial in Vancouver. The former Mountie pleaded not guilty Monday to one count of committing “preparatory acts” for an offence under Canada’s Security of Information Act.

The prosecution alleges Majcher had prepared to coerce B.C. resident Hongwei Sun, also known as Kevin Sun, into returning to China, where he was wanted for financial crimes, for the benefit or at the direction of the Chinese government.

Tsui said the Vancouver incident happened after the relationship had already “started to take a turn” in 2017, when the Canadian government denied China’s request to station two Chinese liaison officers in Vancouver, on top of two already based in Ottawa.

Asked why the request was denied, Tsui said Canadian authorities wanted consistency.

“Any police-to-police co-operation would be through the embassy. So, they had their two (liaison officers) assigned in Ottawa, we had two (liaison officers) assigned in Beijing, and at the end of the day, any co-operation for police-to-police, basically, issues, was through those two offices and not a satellite office.”

Tsui said the decision elicited a negative reaction by Chinese authorities.

“It was a direct rebuke from one of their director generals to the RCMP and basically a statement that it would hurt the policing-to-policing relationships.”

Tsui said the second development that caused a “really significant impact” to the relationship was the December 2018 arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou at the behest of U.S. authorities attempting to extradite her on fraud charges later resolved with a deferred prosecution agreement, allowing her return to China.

Majcher’s trial follows a B.C. Supreme Court ruling last month in which Justice Martha Devlin found Majcher’s warrantless arrest at Vancouver’s airport in 2023 was unconstitutional, occurring without reasonable and probable grounds.

Devlin found the grounds for Majcher’s arrest “amount only to a hunch or generalized suspicion” that he engaged in a conspiracy to assist China’s efforts in a manner that would contravene Canadian law, the March 26 ruling said.

The ruling described a police report that said Sun was wanted in China for financial crimes “ranging into the hundreds of millions of dollars.”

It said the report indicated Sun, a Vancouver resident, “allegedly used the proceeds of his financial crimes to purchase large amounts of real estate” in the city.

Tsui testified Monday that he first heard about Sun in 2016, when Chinese authorities alerted him to a “historical fraud” case dating back to the late 1990s or early 2000s in which an individual had allegedly defrauded the Industrial Commercial Bank of China of 2.8 billion yuan, now worth about $560 million.

Chinese authorities believed about $120 million had left China, alleging Sun had taken it, and indicating he was living in the Vancouver area, Tsui said.

Chinese authorities had initially asked the RCMP to arrest Sun, but Tsui said they did not provide sufficient information for Mounties to make a determination.

Tsui said Chinese authorities then asked if they could speak to Sun, prompting a request for Mounties in Vancouver to find him.

However, Sun refused to attend a meeting and indicated Chinese authorities “couldn’t touch him” in Canada, Tsui said, using an expletive to describe Sun’s response to the request.

Tsui said RCMP then told Chinese authorities they were halting work on the file in February or March 2017, officially closing it a year later.

If Sun had agreed to questioning, RCMP would have arranged the location and asked Chinese police for a list of questions, Tsui said Tuesday.

“The (Ministry of Public Security) may be in the room, but it would be the RCMP doing all of the questioning and all of the talk,” he said, noting the same process would be followed for Mounties who wanted to question someone in China.

The protocol was partly aimed at ensuring Chinese police questions “weren’t coercing any answers from the person,” Tsui said.

He said it was “well known” that Chinese Ministry of Public Security officials pressured family members of alleged fugitives as a tactic, though he couldn’t confirm “100 per cent” that it was happening.

“But we knew of it and we heard from our partners that they had the same issues.”

It was an important consideration for the RCMP, Tsui said, because they would not use information provided as a result of pressure or coercion.

He also said the RCMP would not help Chinese authorities on potential death-penalty cases.

Tsui said he’d also heard of Chinese authorities making direct contact with people they accused of being economic fugitives, along with “pressuring their families, seizing assets and freezing bank accounts” in China.

He said he was aware, but could not state with certainty, that Chinese officials were contacting people in Canada “and attempting to negotiate their return, he said.

Tsui said Chinese authorities would not divulge their tactics, but he did hear of them hiring law firms and private investigators to help locate people.

Majcher’s trial is set to continue Wednesday.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 21, 2026.

Brenna Owen, The Canadian Press