My colleague Ms. Messamore cited some very relevant examples from Canada's constitutional history, most notably the prorogation of 1873, when Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald tried to evade the inquiry into the Pacific Scandal. It was really an attempt to use prorogation to end parliamentary scrutiny of a case of corruption and misappropriation of public funds.
It's not very difficult to draw a parallel with what happened a few months ago, because the WE Charity issue has also been the subject of parliamentary investigations by four committees, as the Conservative member who spoke before you mentioned. The committees were studying what happened in that case and what public funds were diverted or whether they were used properly.
So there are examples. Others are not related to corruption, but to the detention of Afghan detainees in Afghanistan, as has been mentioned as well.