Ms. Shanahan, I'm happy to provide context for this call.
These were the additional records and dates that the Ethics Commissioner reviewed prior to his September 12 letter. On September 6, while I was en route to Vancouver, a call came in that I was not able to take regarding GHI's account with the company. They were using records they had on file in an attempt to reach somebody from the company.
Despite the fact that I had not been involved in the company for more than a year, I then got a voice mail to text indicating Global Health's import account with Purolator. I texted Mr. Anderson to let him know about this voice mail. He then called me at 11:29 Mountain Time for a one-minute phone call. At 11:30 Mountain Time, that phone call ended. We discussed this account entirely. That was it. I forwarded the messages from Purolator to Mr. Anderson, and the conversation ended.
This is all documented clearly in the records that I provided to the Ethics Commissioner and that we have submitted proactively to the committee today for your information, and it was after reviewing these messages that the Ethics Commissioner wrote to me on September 12 and declined to investigate and closed this matter.
If I may, Madam Shanahan, the commissioner said the following: “On the basis of the information you have provided, and in the absence of any evidence giving me reason to believe you may have been operating or managing GHI in contravention of the act, I consider this matter closed.”