Thank you very much, Mr. Paulson, for being here today.
I think that having seen the video, all of us find it a bit chilling. I do understand that there are reasons for not being able to show the entire video. I look forward to that being possible at some point in the future.
What it reminds me of first of all is the death of Nathan Cirillo here. All of us, I think, have him in our hearts and minds as we go through this incident. The second thing it reminds me of is the day after the incident when we as parliamentarians came back into the House and were sitting again to send that very strong signal to the world that we would not be cowed by this incident or the incident in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu that resulted in the death of Patrice Vincent.
We will be looking forward to seeing the final report. As a former police board member, I know that you can never ask the police when the report is done, because it's done when it's done.
I do have two questions for you.
In your presentation, you mentioned the issue of resources and the large number of people you have working on this case. I'd like to ask you about a statement you made to the Standing Senate Committee on National Security and Defence on October 27, when you said that you had to transfer 300 resources over to national security from other areas of policing. This raises the question of whether you have adequate resources to actually deal with the nature of the threats we're facing at present. Do you have any comments on that today?