No, I ran into absolutely no difficulty in that regard.
One of the elements of my mandate was to make recommendations if I thought further were needed, and I was prepared as I went into it to have to make those kinds of recommendations. As it turned out, no one denied me access to any documents. No one refused to come forward. We got all the electronic stuff that we needed. We could see that there were conflicting testimonies before this committee, so I realized I had to try to get behind that testimony. I knew I had to get full access to hard drives of computers, and so on, to be able to see what was going on. We were denied none of that.
As I said in the report, you can never know what you don't know. It doesn't matter how extensive an investigation is; you'll always have that little nagging concern that maybe there's something out there. There was no indication in what I did see that there were things lurking out there that, frankly, made me suspicious.