I would make a point that there is systemic fraud in the investment products sold by the investment banks and banks of Canada. This fraud produces profits that are not taken to tax havens. These profits show up simply as return on equity for the banks and improved share prices. So from that perspective, I would say no.
In the case of many of the Quebec crimes, I would agree. For example, it's alleged that the money in the Norshield is not on Canadian soil. The problem, I would say, is not that we can't find the money, but that we don't even have anybody at the front end to start the criminal investigation and follow the money. I'm not discounting the need for greater provisions to find it. I'm saying that in many cases we don't even have the expert police working to start an investigation when the money has gone offshore. They don't have the expertise or the funds to track it down. Even with changes in the Criminal Code directed at tax havens, even with inter-country agreements, we need to take the white-collar crime jurisdiction outside the RCMP, put it in a unit with experience in forensic policing, commit sufficient funds, and assign more police to get the criminals charged, get them successfully prosecuted, and find the money.