Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Again, based on the samples we took and the tests we applied, we found somewhere around 50 cases in which there were indications that people might be trying to obtain their Canadian citizenship through fraudulent means. I've said a number of times that in my estimation those are 50 cases too many, because we didn't have to apply particularly sophisticated tests to find them.
Now, I can't take those 50 cases and extrapolate to how many other cases might be problems and then to how many of those cases could actually be fraud. The only thing I can tell you is that we did say in the background in the introduction to the report, in paragraphs 2.3 and 2.4, for example, that “The Department reported that in January 2016, it had about 700 revocation cases pending.” That's 700 cases that the department itself had identified. The three most common reasons for revoking citizenship are fraud related to residency, identity, or undeclared criminal proceedings. Those were the three things we looked at in this report.
Then at the bottom of paragraph 2.4, “In 2012, the Department issued a public warning that nearly 11,000 individuals had been linked to residency fraud investigations.”
I can't extrapolate the 50. It was extremely disappointing to me that we were able to find those 50 cases, and I think when you look at the other information the department has, it indicates that there are a significant number of people who are obtaining citizenship through fraudulent means.