I discussed it with Jacqueline Hodgson, who is the leading British expert. She teaches at the University of Warwick. I went to England and went up to Warwick to meet her in preparation for the Diab case. She was hired by the Tony Blair government when it was considering mimicking French anti-terrorism law and the use of intelligence as if it were evidence, which was going on in the Diab case. She has taught French law in France. She's fluently bilingual.
She made a study for the Blair government and the Home Office in the U.K. about the provisions that we, for example, have in our act permitting reliance on this unsourced, unidentified intelligence evidence. She found it would be in violation of.... I can't remember whether it's article 5 or article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
That's as far as I went, Mr. Fortin.