Canada Bread's criminal guilty plea in the summer related to our extensive investigation into allegations of criminal price-fixing in the bread industry in Canada over many years. Canada Bread was a co-operative party with our criminal investigation through what we call our leniency program, which is an established program that many of our colleagues around the world also have. The fine that it received was the highest price-fixing fine ever in Canada. We continue to pursue that investigation.
The way it works for us with criminal investigations is that we are the investigative body—we're the police force, for lack of a better term—and we go through all the facts and all the evidence we can uncover with respect to allegations of price-fixing or, in other cases, bid-rigging. We then provide that as a package to the Public Prosecution Service of Canada as a referral. It makes a decision on whether or not to lay criminal charges against other parties under investigation.
As far as it relates to other companies that are involved in our investigation, there's no finding of wrongdoing at this time, but we have benefited from the co-operation of both Loblaw and Weston Foods—and now Canada Bread.