Thank you for that question.
I did discuss this in some detail with the investigators during the course of our two meetings. From time to time, as a result of my responsibilities, the Department of Foreign Affairs or the foreign policy staff in the Privy Council Office do have occasion to share diplomatic reporting with me on a variety of issues, and I appreciate that.
I would say I have a good familiarity with the classification system that's used to protect different categories of diplomatic reporting that we get from our missions overseas. It has been my experience that information of the sort that was in the report that came from the Chicago consulate general to me on February 28 is typically classified at the confidential or secret level.
So on February 28, when I finally received the text of the Chicago consulate general's report, I must admit it was a busy day. As you'll recall, I think I spent that morning here at this committee, asking to be heard on the Soudas investigation, and the committee declined to hear from me at that point. But I had spent the morning sitting here watching that committee hearing unfold.
I received the report from Chicago. The date and time are listed in the appendix of Mr. Lynch's report. Although I read the text of the report carefully, I assumed that it was classified at the confidential or secret level. It wasn't marked that way, and I must admit, I guess I didn't read the top routing information on the message. I assumed it was like other diplomatic reports I had seen in the past on the same sorts of subjects.
I handled it as if it were a secret document, printed it, read it, and then disposed of it by putting it in the confidential information shred box in my office here in the Centre Block. It was later taken by the authorized folks from the office, shredded and pulverized, destroyed.
So I read the report. It took me probably five or ten minutes to read it over a couple of times and absorb the report, and before I had even put it down, I walked over to the shred box and disposed of it securely.
That's my normal practice in dealing with diplomatic reports.