No. The answer is simply no, and this is a big problem. The oligarchs have spent the last 22 years assuming that one oligarch is going to steal from another oligarch, or a government is going to try to expropriate their money, so they've bought the best asset-protection advice that money can buy. They'll run circles around us. However, I have an idea—and this is something that I've presented to the British Parliament, I've presented to the U.S. Congress and I present to you today—which is that the only way we will ever know how they put their stuff together, how they put these schemes together to hide their money, is to have the people who put them together tell us.
These people aren't in the business of telling us the information they have, because they would claim lawyer-client confidentiality or something similar. So my idea or proposal to you is to put an amendment into the sanctions law, and that amendment should be very simple. It would say that any professional service firm, whether it be a law firm, a banker, an accountant or any other firm that has provided information, advice or consultation on the holding and structuring of assets of a person who has been sanctioned by the Canadian government is under a duty of law, and under penalty of law, to come forward and explain the information that they have on that oligarch—that person, that sanctioned individual—so that the government then is effectively taking these individuals who structured these things and turning them into whistle-blowers by law.