From our point of view, we determine whether it's evidence or not.
We have collaborations, obviously, with the hydro sector and other major infrastructure industries that have internal corporate security. Yes, if we identify a person who has a certain affiliation with a certain group, we alert them to let them know that they should keep an eye on that individual. They may in fact work on our advice to them.
In this private-public partnership that government is trying to drive—and we're at the table all the time—as one of the concerns they have the private sector people say, “We have all this to offer, and what can you offer us?”
Going back to the original concern, we say it deals with what level of security people have within each industry. Do they meet our top secret—? Can they be held accountable under the secret offences act? That determines how close our interoperability is.
For our part, either we can alert them as to an internal operative who could bring down Hydro Ontario by throwing one switch; or they might say, we're highly suspicious of this individual, who seems to be accessing files within our system that really have nothing to do with their job. So they may gather information, but when it reaches us, we look at it, and that step becomes the footings for us now to ask whether this is an investigative time, whether this is evidence.
The crown prosecutor or the Department of Justice will look at it and weigh whether or not it's admissible or inadmissible, and we flow from that.
But yes, you're correct. If I were an investigator and knew somebody who was working on a bridge and who might want to blow up the bridge between Detroit and Windsor, I would certainly let Transport Canada know—for instance, I'd like you to keep an eye on that person, because they're affiliated with certain groups. Then they would start gathering information for their self-protection.
In the old days, we wouldn't tell the bank the robbers were coming. So the robber would come, go into the bank, put everybody at risk, and leave. Then we'd arrest him outside the door and say, there, we caught you robbing the bank. Now what we do is call the bank to let them know there's a possible—