Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to look at the second part of the report, which was the subject of my last two questions for the minister, that is to say, managing and reporting on results, two extremely deficient areas within the Canada Revenue Agency.
My impression is that the Minister of National Revenue had three figures imprinted on her memory: $1 billion, $25 billion and 78 convictions. The people at her office asked her to remember the figures 1, 25 and 78, and she has constantly repeated them: we've invested $1 billion, we're going to recover $25 billion, and we've obtained 78 convictions to date. She has repeated the figures learned by rote.
We realize from the Auditor General's report that those figures may mislead some people because they're not really true. The methodology used to arrive at those figures isn't that good, particularly regarding the $25 billion figure, which is problematic. That was the subject of my first question.
However, given the time I have left, I'd like to talk about convictions first. Earlier the minister told us that $1 billion had been invested in the plan and that it was working. I asked her questions about offshore tax evasion.
If the plan's working, how many convictions have there been for offshore tax evasion in the past three years, since the Liberals came to power?