As I said earlier, I have three reasons to believe that.
One, because we didn't know what this report was, our advice was not to raise it unless the commission raised it. That was the extent of our advice in terms of being reactive, or not proactively talking about this. Remember, this was July 5, and he was only appearing on July 27, so our view was that we would have time to get the report, look at it, determine its relevance and figure out whether it could or couldn't be.... Our advice to him was, “It's the first we've heard of this. We haven't seen it. Don't raise it if they don't raise it, but if they do, you'll have to answer.”
The other reason we think he misunderstood is that he suggested during his testimony that we also told him not to provide information about the April 28 meeting, and that makes no sense, sir, because all of the information about the April 28 meeting was already before the commission, so there was no reason for us to suggest that.
There's also his reference to his call to the commissioner on April 22. We learned about that when he testified on the 27th. It's not in his notes, and so for him to suggest that we told him not to talk about a meeting that we'd never heard about doesn't make sense.
That's why my conclusion is that he misunderstood the advice. Our advice was only specifically with respect to the Quintet report, because we didn't know anything about it at the time, on July 5.