All right. In terms of natural justice, that really is a principle that might apply to what I just said. It's a sense of natural justice that you don't do something against someone--against the person of someone, certainly--by going out to arrest them or apprehending them without having afforded them an opportunity to get notice that they were required to do something, failing which they may be arrested. That's all I'm saying.
If that were in the repertoire of the committee and the House to take action against her of that kind, I would think that natural justice would require that she be personally notified that the committee expects her to be here and that failure to attend could have that result.