I think the question concerning the Canada Revenue Agency is very interesting. Tax returns are secret, and they're used to conducting their investigations secretly, but at the same time they don't do it. A good example of that occurred last spring. Mr. Blackburn, the Minister of National Revenue, gave a press conference on the searches of Tony Accurso's businesses. He made that affair extremely public. That's an excellent thing because that enormously increases the pressure on the person concerned and informs public opinion.
There is a negative example. Agreements on income were reached between the Canada Revenue Agency and Vito Rizzuto before he was removed to the United States. A large part of that process was done in secret.
I'm a journalist, and I'm speaking in my own interest and that of my colleagues. I think a lot of government agencies would do well to feed journalists information; that has an enormous impact.