Yes, I'd be happy to. I skipped this because I ran out of time.
I can do it by reading you a quotation, if you would allow it. I'll read you a paragraph that I left out of my statement and I'll explain to you what happened, in response to your question. It goes like this.
Anti-Israel and anti-Jewish speeches are a defining feature of this rally —I'm talking about Al-Quds Day—along with Hezbollah flags and posters of the Ayatollah Khomeini. Our greatest concern, however, is a type of language employed by the leaders of this rally in gaining support for their cause. For example, as reported by The Globe and Mail and various other news agencies, video footage of the 2013 rally appears to show the former head of Palestine House declaring to the crowd, “We have to give them an ultimatum: you have to leave Jerusalem; you have to leave Palestine. When somebody tries to rob a bank, the police get in. They don't negotiate, and we have been negotiating with them for 65 years. We say, get out or you are dead. We give them two minutes and then we start shooting, and that's the only way they'll understand.”
This was said at Queen's Park in 2013 in front of hundreds and hundreds of people.
In response to your question, we gathered all this information. We gathered the video evidence, the statements, everything, we put together a file. We went to the hate crime unit of the Toronto police. They looked at it. They concurred with us, and they sent it off.
Now, the issue with hate speech is that you have to get the AG to sign off on it. So it went off to the AG, whom we also met with and talked to about how we felt. At the end of the day, he turned it down.
Now, I honestly believe that he didn't press charges against this individual because it is politicized. This particular person is a leader in the community. We've seen this time and time again.
I can give you another example. The east—