I'm very flattered by what you just said, Mr. Chairman, but I don't know how much of it would stand the test of time.
However, much of the advice that I might offer from time to time is a function of the particular situation that the committee is in, so it's hard for me to speak now without having a particular situation that's emerged.
Let me just offer these general guidelines. When—and I won't say “if”—Mr. Schreiber is here Thursday morning and speaks to the committee, there might be some sub judice consideration for committee members. In other words, I expect he still will be awaiting a response to his application for leave to appeal in the Supreme Court of Canada, and that matter itself should not be the subject of comment by committee members.
Also, in the course of his testimony it may be that he makes allegations or provides testimony that reflects on third parties who are not yet heard by the committee. I would recommend that committee members be mindful of the fact that these third parties to whom he might refer would not have had an opportunity to say anything yet, and what he may say about third parties should not be used in a manner that's detrimental to the good reputation of third parties, beyond what is necessary for the purposes of hearing Mr. Schreiber's testimony. It's a sense of fairness. That's all I'm saying.
Sometimes, as happened with Radwanski, if my memory serves, it can happen that there are some issues emerging of a kind where third parties are coming up, private citizens. The committee went in camera to hear the testimony, at least initially, to see that nobody was unnecessarily injured or offended by what the testimony might say. I seem to recall on many occasions when the committee came back out of camera that the same testimony was led, because it turned out there was nothing there that was injurious to any third party.
It's a matter of exercising some care about the interests of third parties who may come up in the course of his testimony. You can't predict this; it just may happen. But if it does happen, one should be cautious and not pursue that recklessly, because it may well prove to be untrue, or there may well be an answer by the person that would put a serious qualification on what he's saying. It's a question of fairness, that's all.
Apart from that, the sub judice rule is something to consider.
I don't know, Mr. Chairman, whether I can offer much more than that at this time. We just await the unfolding of events and deal with situations as they emerge.