I'll speak quickly to it, and then I'll ask Alex to add something. This is more his specific domain, in the sense that he was one of those officers earlier in his career.
They tend to be accountant types in the way that a CRA auditor is—not always, but they tend to be B.Com. accountant types. They're the kind of people who can reasonably be sent into a boardroom of a foreign company to bust open the books, pore through them, and really figure things out. What is the price at which that company is selling in their domestic market, recognizing what the various subsidy programs might be? What's the actual price they're selling at, and how does that compare with the price they're selling it at in Canada? Are they de facto selling lower in Canada than they sell in their own domestic market, which constitutes dumping?
It's about poring through the books and wading through the minutiae to really get to the truth and the heart of the matter. Those are the kinds of people. It takes a while for them to learn the Special Import Measures Act. The requirements we adhere to in order to be WTO-compliant, including the formulas and the calculation methods we use, are all prescribed in the legislation. There's a lot of learning, but that's the background educationally that they bring.
Alex, did you want to add to that?