Fundamentally—and I'm not talking specifically about this particular case—in criminal investigations, the criminal standard of proof is very high, and it's important that we do our job carefully and well. The Public Prosecution Service of Canada expects that of us. It scrutinizes our referrals and applies a test to decide whether or not charges will be laid, whether there's a reasonable prospect of conviction and whether it's in the public interest.
This investigation—and this is public—is a very large, wide-ranging investigation involving many companies over an extended period of time, but as I said, there's no finding of wrongdoing at this point with respect to those other companies.