Would you like me to read them? I could.
I want to say that when we had the commissioner here, I think it was maybe Mr. Martin who was asking him questions about whether there was any need to black things out and what the purpose of that would be. The deputy commissioner who was here, with the authority to answer the questions, because he has longer experience, said there were 13. And he listed some of the areas where you can legitimately and appropriately, I would say, tell the requester that that information is just not available. We don't have that information in front of us. We should be waiting until the commissioner does the work so we know what is available and what is not.
It was also indicated to me, as I've done some investigation of this, that things often get appealed and resolved— and it doesn't mean that the whole document gets revealed. It means there might be a sentence, or two or three, or a word in a sentence that gets revealed, or a couple of sentences, or a paragraph, and maybe, because the person is human, the ATI person in Foreign Affairs, in this case, may or may not have made any errors in what was put forward. But that is not this committee's determination. I think we should be waiting to deal with that.
One final thing, Mr. Chairman, and then I'll have to relieve the floor. I know everybody is upset. We got a letter—