It would be my submission that the provisions should not be renewed in this broad form. While I recognize, particularly in the area of undercover operations relating to organized crime, there may be very specific concerns and needs that arise in those types of sensitive investigations, what we have instead is a very broad power that is not limited to undercover investigations, is not limited to the investigations of criminal organizations, and is not limited in terms of the types of offences that can be committed, except for the very narrow limitations contained in subsection 25.1(11).
I'm not sure I understood the initial portion of your question, but with respect to the permissibility of conduct that would otherwise constitute an indictable offence, it's not our position that anything that would constitute an offence cannot be justified and law enforcement shouldn't do it. It happens all the time with search warrants. Police officers who don't have a search warrant would be committing an offence if they walked into a private home and started taking property out of it. It happens--