Thank you.
I was really interested in your comments around the crime of structured transactions.
I don't know, Mr. Tassé, if this is an area of interest to you as well, but I find that interesting because in Canada obviously we have a court ruling dealing with lawyers acting on behalf of their clients. I'm wondering if the crime to structure a transaction would, in your view, or in the way it was established, actually then capture from the client-solicitor privilege because it's really not client-solicitor privilege, but the crime of structuring. Is that generally where this is looked at, or is that the U.S.'s experience, or is it something different altogether?