Sure.
In the Rick Dykstra case we looked at the role of a member and a public office holder engaged in fundraising activities. We made a number of recommendations--although there was no breach found in that case--with regard to the potential for conflict of interest when a public office holder or a member gets involved in political fundraising. In particular, the concern would be if there were a situation where a parliamentary secretary, minister, or other public office holder was raising funds from an individual with whom they would have, at some point either in the past or the future, some official duties, or be making some official decisions in regard to. So in terms of the observations and the recommendation for guidelines, it was a forward-looking, preventive type of recommendation.