Yes, absolutely, in a couple of ways that I can think of. First of all, CBSA issues lookouts, which are warnings or red flags concerning an individual. If you are the subject of a lookout and your passport is swiped when you enter Canada, you are automatically referred to a secondary examination. It's not a final judgment. It's an indication, often based on intelligence information, that this is an individual who needs to be subjected to a closer examination before being admitted to Canada. The kind of information you are talking about that we frequently receive from our intelligence counterparts can form the basis of a lookout.
The other way that information received from our partners helps us to do our job is in our role as the hub for the security screening system for the Government of Canada. Applicants for visas to Canada, whether as temporary or permanent residents, go through a system at the centre of which sits a CBSA unit that, after consultation with our security intelligence partners, comes up with a recommendation on admissibility or inadmissibility. Obviously, intelligence information received from our partners helps us greatly in making those recommendations.