That money is allocated to the RCMP, not the Department of Justice.
Mr. Nicholson asked what the $11 million is being used for. I said that $2 million is going to the Department of Justice, but another $9 million is going to other departments, including, for example, the RCMP and Public Safety. They are the ones who, of course, are involved in operational issues such as interception.
Part of the whole issue in terms of policing the Internet is that you need to have the tools. You need to have the legal and technical tools. The Protecting Canadians from Online Crime Act which, as I mentioned, Parliament enacted in 2015, gave police the legal tools to be able to acquire electronic evidence on the Internet.
The other part of the funding goes to various agencies to give them the physical electronic tools to actually intercept communications on the Internet and to trace the communications of child pornographers or fraud artists to see who they are sending the communications to and who is sending the communication, in order to trace and identify the perpetrators of these crimes. That's what the money is going for.