Good.
I will just mention our witnesses. You have a list of the witnesses before you. We had invited Professor Forcese to come here in order to speak to the report he had prepared, or more correctly his policy practicum. He contacted our clerk and asked if it would be permissible for the students who had done the actual preparation to attend with him. I gave consent on your behalf. I should mention that while this is an unusual circumstance, it's not unprecedented. Professor Forcese has, on three occasions, come with a practicum where the entire panel has sat before a committee--Foreign Affairs, Defence, and a third one, which I've forgotten. At any rate, they've done this before and it seems reasonable to do it again.
We have adopted a rule of five-minute rounds, questions and answers. I'm going to have to be pretty ruthless today in maintaining that in order to make sure we get all the way around to everybody twice.
With those items taken care of, I'll just draw one more thing to your attention before I turn things over to Professor Forcese and the other panellists, and that is the fact that you have in front of you, or should have in front of you, a copy of the practicum and the report.... Oh, it's just the executive summary, I'm sorry.
You should also have a copy of the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Canada v. Khadr from last Friday.
That being said, I turn the floor over to you, Professor Forcese.