No, they have not. By the time the request came from the CRCC, those recordings had already been destroyed. What happened was that those recordings were examined completely by our major crimes investigators, who took carriage of that investigation. A full review was done of all relevant material that came in. There was no relevancy on those particular recordings and there was no evidentiary value, so they were just left where they get stored in the usual manner, and within two years, as per the retentions act, they were destroyed. Then the CRCC asked for them, and that's why we couldn't produce them.
In no way was it a cover-up, but I will say that, as a result of that, I have directed a policy review on that to ensure that a retention in such matters is in line with the reality.