Right. I don't mean to interrupt you but I have limited time.
My next question is related to that. Are things different in other forces? If things got lax in the RCMP, could it have something to do with the fact that for many years we didn't have CSIS?
It seems to me the RCMP was occupying the role that CSIS has now. Therefore, it probably felt it was in a privileged position to protect national security at a very high level and therefore it might have to undertake some initiatives that might not be entirely within the law. We saw that in the mid-seventies, and so on. Is it because it thought that it was not the darling of the government but that it had a very important role to play in protecting the government and our society from security threats, and that it might have to take extraordinary measures, almost covert measures, to accomplish those goals?
Do you think the fact that we didn't have CSIS at the time and that a lot of the responsibility was on the shoulders of the RCMP made the RCMP perhaps feel it had a privileged position?