As you know, the service is not a law enforcement agency and is not ultimately responsible for the laying of charges or the prosecution thereafter.
The foreign interference space is indeed a particularly complex one. Much of the activity, as we've discussed in numerous fora recently, is extremely grey. It is not always directly linked back to a hostile actor. There are often several degrees of separation. There can be all sorts of legitimate activity, and a fragment of that could be illegitimate.
The detection, the investigation, and the ultimate downstream prosecution in these cases can be complex. Part of that goes to the package of amendments before you. Part of it goes to the offences, which I'll let my Justice colleagues speak to, and part of it goes to the challenge of using highly sensitive intelligence and disclosing it to the RCMP in such a way that they can use it to launch an independent and parallel investigation, and then protecting that sensitive information when it comes to a court proceeding.
Some of the measures we're talking about today will make incremental movements to improve that scenario.
I'll pass it to my Department of Justice colleagues, who could pick up the back end of that question.