No. I think a filtering process goes on and the real roadblock is between the regulatory or investigatory side and the prosecutorial side.
The example that the CBC reported on is a relatively extreme example. As you know, the Attorney General has said that he's looking into it.
I can say from my experience, although I won't reveal my sources, that I've had a number of police agencies, regulatory agencies, and investigators express frustration to me. I can tell you that in my practice, when I'm on the side of the investors, I've been frustrated not in getting the cases investigated, but in getting a prosecutor to take them on.
When they do take them on, my experience generally has been that they see them through. When the 2004 amendments came in and IMET was created, I was personally encouraged by that initiative, because what I've seen since I was at the securities commission 20 years ago is a need for a specialized commercial crime prosecution agency. Somewhere between the national IMET, which is funded by the federal government, and the provincial attorneys general, there is a disconnect. I am seeing a difficulty in getting prosecutors to take cases forward that are brought to them by the Ontario Securities Commission, for example.