As I said, we saw the U.S. being at the forefront for deferred prosecution agreements, non-prosecution agreements and no-contest settlements—a whole panoply of tools that prosecutors can use to resolve corporate misconduct. Canada never had it for pure criminal allegations and investigations against corporations. That's the catch-up.
The U.K. brought it in in 2013. Ours is largely modelled after that regime. What we were missing was.... We were not harmonized with other major economic players globally and it made it very difficult. The reality is that most corporations are global entities. They operate around the world. We weren't able, in many cases, to negotiate a global resolution because of the lack of that tool in the kit that other nation-states had. We certainly were playing catch-up, and we made it.