The only reaction I can give is that it's a very difficult type of investigation, and I'm not sure you're going to be very satisfied.
I'm also not sure that even those who had been in government have an appreciation of how widespread it was, because it's something that operates very much at the officials' level. I can give you an example. I remember, I think, it was in the DND case. The minister then was Arthur Eggleton, and practically every request from that department was being flagged as sensitive. They were all going up, and the records were sitting in some special assistant's office and going nowhere, and the minister had no idea.
I believed him, because the assistant had never read any of the records, so obviously wasn't briefing the minister on what was going out the door. The documents were not even being read. We've seen that in other departments too, that the system suddenly kind of serves itself in a way, but doesn't really serve the minister.
So I'm not sure that even ministers and cabinets would know the extent of it.