Mr. Chairman, no.
This bill deals with pretexting, and that's one particular kind of activity involved in the overall panoply of activities that are what we call identity theft.
Perhaps I'll ask Ms. Klineberg to address the particular issue of credit cards. There are a number of particular provisions in the Criminal Code that address possession and misuse of credit cards.
But in general, one of the things we are looking at in the identity theft initiative that Ms. Klineberg spoke about is these sorts of preparatory activities, if you will.
Whether it's in the form of a credit card or whether it's in the form of passwords and other information that can be used to access bank accounts, or whatever form it may take, before the stolen identity actually gets used...and in many cases it may be used well down the line. That is, when criminal organizations are involved, sometimes the activity is broken down into a chain, and the people who do the actual identity theft pass that on to other people, who then use it for the purpose of actually pulling out the money from bank accounts or credit card accounts. It's that preparatory activity we're very much focusing on.
But perhaps I can ask--