Mr. Chair, yes, I'd be happy to take a quick moment and talk about that.
The first thing I would point out is that in proposed subsection 18.5(5), you'll note that it would not be for the instruction, or part of it, to be available to the public. It sends some instruction to the provost marshal that he can release part of the instructions if that would be appropriate.
The type of circumstance, I think, is one that arises in probably any police investigative situation. There may well be circumstances in which the police do not want to let an individual who is the subject of the investigation know the investigation is going on, or it could be witnesses. I'm not a police officer and I don't have a great deal of expertise in the nature of the work, but I do know that the police are often quite protective of the fact that they are pursuing an investigation, because to not ensure that this information is kept confidential actually jeopardizes their ability to pursue the investigation. I assume that it would be that type of assessment that the provost marshal would undertake in deciding whether or not to make the investigation or the direction public.
Again, that doesn't mean he can't make it public at a later date. The discretion is completely his as to what he does with that direction, subject to the test that he's got to be able to satisfy himself and anybody who may revisit that discretion that it was done in the best interests of the administration of justice.