I've not had any direct contacts with her. What I do know is that a number of U.S. officials, including the President's national security adviser for Russia, Mike McFaul, along with Assistant Secretary of State Gordon, had been asked specifically about this in Moscow when they visited. The answers they've given have been I think deliberately not clear. They said they never disclose if somebody is or is not on a visa ban list and that they wouldn't disclose that here. Then they went on to say that the Magnitsky case is important for the administration.
So it's unclear what the official position is, and I imagine there is both a very strong desire not to upset the domestic audience in America by allowing torturers and murderers to come into America, but I'm sure that at the same time they don't want to offend their Russian counterparts. So it's a very difficult position for the administration to be in, but it's something that unfortunately you have to pick sides on ultimately. You can't sit in the middle of it, and I think that's the direction it's going in right now.