Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and through you to the witnesses, thank you for attending today.
I want to especially thank Mr. Stamatakis for the statement he just made, because my question was going to be based on human resource protection as it relates to criminal investigations, and in this case, protecting Canadians through intelligence sources. One of the key components in this legislation—and there are basically only three—has to do with protecting human sources.
I'm going to go through a few things. One of the complaints we've heard is that if you know who some of the players are, why are they not arrested? Would you agree with me that sometimes during the course of investigations you let the little fish go because you're actually trying to identify a bigger fish that will lead you to a better conclusion to the problem that you already have?