We occupy some of the same territory. CSIS has a mandate in respect of national security. Our job, among others, is to provide intelligence and information to the government on national security issues. The RCMP has a mandate, obviously, as a police organization for criminal prosecutions and investigations. Twenty-two or twenty-three years ago we were one and the same organization. In fact, there is another public inquiry just launched, headed by a former chief justice of the Supreme Court, whose task, among others, is to determine why CSIS and the RCMP did not cooperate at the time of the Air India inquiry and what should be done going forward to ensure that there are improvements in that cooperation.
It's a difficult distinction to draw for many people, the difference between what we do and what the RCMP does. In general terms, we collect intelligence and we advise the government. If there are circumstances in which we believe an activity could constitute or might constitute a criminal act, that would normally be turned over to a police organization to deal with as a criminal prosecution. In the case of Mr. Arar, there had been a CSIS investigation involving some individuals. That investigation was turned over to the RCMP in the aftermath of the 9/11 incidents and the burgeoning demands on CSIS. But the investigation involving some set of individuals, with whom Mr. Arar subsequently became associated, was then an RCMP criminal investigation.