I did, just in response to some of the questions, first of all with respect to laws already being on the books that simply aren't being applied, and also to Ms. Walker's last point about whether this is a group of people that can be trusted to self-regulate.
By their own testimony, their own public statement, they keep everything that has ever been uploaded to the site, even if it's been disabled from the public. We know that with few exceptions they have never really been reporting to NCMEC or to Canadian authorities, which they're required to report to when they find child pornography.
The fact of the matter is that in servers in the United States and Canada this company is probably the largest repository of child pornography in North America, which we all know is flat out a crime. It's all there. It hasn't been reported, and they haven't followed all the rules and regulations to handle it.
The second thing I would say is that I think Ms. Walker was talking about the corporate structure. We've been investigating this company for about a year. I've mentioned the corporate structure before. I've done many international cases involving many complicated companies. I've never seen anything like this company's corporate structure. It is the absolutely quintessential structure set up to avoid accountability, transparency and liability.
I'll leave you with this. We have some monsters in the U.S. We had a monster named Harvey Weinstein. We had a monster named Epstein. MindGeek is Canada's monster. It is. This is a bad, unaccountable rogue company.