Thank you for your question, Mr. Ménard.
I have to caution everybody that hypothetical questions have their own set of facts. The matter about which we are appearing before the committee has its own set of facts. Two plus two doesn't equal five. If you take facts from a hypothetical case and try to apply it to a specific case, you may not come out with the same results.
I had very clearly said that when information comes to our attention, we check the information for accuracy, reliability, and relevance. Should all these factors come into play, as well as other external factors that may come into a very specific case, we would then take action. If necessary because it's reliable, accurate, relevant, and causes us concern based on the facts, we would notify PCO.