Part of what we've done, particularly since releasing this report, is meet with investigative agencies. We hear routinely that there's a need to strip away bureaucracy. You need to have approvals and you need to reach a certain level of evidentiary standards, but there's a need to make sure that this stays with people who are able to do this quickly and understand what's going on. That comes down to really letting these agencies do their job without having this get held up in a lot of review and things like that.
There's also just a need, frankly, for more budget and more people to be able to investigate these things. At this point, we've done more work with the U.S. government on this than the Canadian government, with understanding the weeds of that. To give an example here from the U.S. side on Russian sanctions evasions, the organization BIS, which is responsible for investigating these things, only has a very small number of people who are able to investigate this. Having done this ourselves in a private capacity outside of the government, it takes many months to pull together even a few names and pull together the evidence on them.
It shouldn't be two, three or four people who are in the government investigating these things. It should be dozens or more. There are hundreds of companies in Hong Kong alone, much less China or the Middle East and autocracies there, that have filled up these holes, filling the void and reshipping these things.