Thank you.
My question relates to this matter of solicitor-client privilege. While I'm not a lawyer, my understanding is that privilege is not upheld in cases where a person was communicating with a lawyer to orchestrate a crime. If the two were talking or corresponding to commit a crime, then they cannot privilege their conversation on the basis that one of them just happens to be a lawyer and was advising the other on how to carry out a crime and participating in it.
Ms. Saperia, how would you recommend we address that problem when we deal with the issue of structuring that you mentioned earlier?