It's very true, what you're saying. The organized crime elements are using very sophisticated methods to shelter their money. They're using cryptocurrencies, which are very difficult to trace, in some instances. They're using different types of wallets that are not the typical ones we would know that are above ground.
It becomes very difficult to trace it in the layering of the companies, and sometimes we have lawyers who are named in these companies, and then you have client-solicitor privilege, which also becomes an issue.
Some of these lawyers are willingly doing it and some are unknowingly doing it, so it becomes a very difficult task from a law enforcement perspective. We are looking at it from the crime side. We're not looking at the tax evasion side of the house. That's a CRA mandate. We're looking at the predicate offences, like the drug trafficking that's leading to the money laundering, the sophisticated frauds and the large frauds that are the offences allowing them to move large amounts of funds.
