Thank you, Mr. Chair.
To Ms. Crampton, in your presentation you said a number of things that sounded quite disappointingly familiar to me from my career in the mortgage industry, where in cases of fraud, the difficulty of prosecution, the lack of resources—these kinds of things—have been cited by law enforcement, prosecution offices, and indeed industry as reasons that fraud is not prosecuted in Canada in many cases. I would like you to perhaps carry on and give us a little bit more detail about the barriers to being able to investigate and obtain convictions in fraud.
To Mr. Grewal's question, 53 sounds like a shockingly low number of active, open fraud investigations for a country the size of Canada, where I understand that perhaps as much as 50% or more of all the proceeds of crime is laundered through real estate transactions. That figure is from a perhaps dated study, but it is information that I had learned in my career. Could you expand on the barriers to getting prosecutions and being able to obtain convictions?