It's a very good question. We've been working with law enforcement and our security partners to try to put in place what we call a feedback mechanism. We disclose to law enforcement--I'll use law enforcement as the example--they investigate, since we're not an investigative agency, and hopefully their investigations will lead to charges and then to prosecutions.
But tracking those statistics through the Canadian judicial system is difficult. We disclose to the RCMP, but also to provincial and municipal police forces. So what we did at FINTRAC was establish, in consultation and partnership with the law enforcement community, through the auspices of the National Coordinating Committee on Organized Crime, a mechanism that would allow us to start collecting feedback on how useful our case disclosures were.
Now, I have preliminary results. We established this mechanism towards the end of the last fiscal year and we put it in place in the fall of last year. We are assembling the results for the case disclosures that we made just in the previous year. We're not finished assembling those results for all of the case disclosures, but we do plan to collect and analyze those results and publish them in our annual report, which is to be tabled in the fall.
We do have preliminary indications that 60% of those who have responded so far have indicated that our information has provided them with new investigative leads, and 74% have indicated that it has been relevant to their investigations.