Yes. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I do want to pick up on that point. You said there were 174 ridings, and when you consider that there are 308 ridings, it's unbelievable in terms of the abuse that had taken place in the last federal election, and the degree to which Elections Canada had been contacted by, from what I understand, in one form or another, more than 30,000 Canadians.
Of course, the driving force behind this was the robocalls. The robocalls, or what have been known as the robocalls, are what have really angered a good number of Canadians from coast to coast to coast. In fact, I would suggest to you that it's one of the primary reasons we have this legislation before us.
Mr. Shrybman, in your presentation, in trying to get justice in this whole issue, because it all goes back, from my perspective, to the data bank.... The literally tens of thousands of mischievous phone calls, everything from calling late in the evening to get voters upset and to maybe not vote for a particular political party, to calling on inappropriate days during the week, to calling on election day telling the person to vote in another location...the purpose of that was all about voter suppression.
From the court documents—and you made it a part of your presentation—it seems that the Conservative Party data bank is the one that's been tied to the data bank that has most likely been used in terms of allowing those calls to be made. We don't know who made the calls, but are you fairly confident...? You've tabled the document with the quotes from Justice Mosley. Can you provide a further comment in terms of why it's so conclusive that it was the Conservative Party data bank that appears to be the data bank that was used to make these tens of thousands of calls?