Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
It's clear, particularly in the many series of meetings we've had in relation to this work.... We've also, of course, summoned Mr. Kristian Firth under contempt of Parliament to answer questions that he failed to answer in another committee. It's clear throughout this process that we've investigated several instances over a long period of time, but this has been, I think, a shocking case to Canadians.
I think it's important to note that this work and what's happened in Parliament, particularly with Public Services and Procurement Canada, has been really troubling. This is one of the cases that is being highlighted. I think what's here is a really deep concern I have, a systemic concern, a concern of systemic corruption taking place in Public Services and Procurement Canada. We notice this in this particular instance, but we've seen it several times. We know this because these actors are some of the same actors that have been involved in Public Services and Procurement Canada since as early as 2011.
GC Strategies, for example, was a tenure to contracts with the government even before the Liberals were in power. They went unnoticed at that time and changed their company name when the election was called. When the Liberals took power, they changed their name to GC Strategies. We see these same actors, these two-person companies, operating under the former government and operating under this government. We see this kind of behaviour of contracts that become huge webs, these massive webs of subcontracting, where even task authorizations are amended several times.
At what point did the RCMP think of, open investigations on or have any comments on the systemic nature of this contracting that seems to prefer certain actors versus others, particularly when it comes to non-competitive contracts? Do you have comments on that?