 Corruption and financial crimes are interwoven. I mean, if you look at a corruption investigation, almost in every aspect there is a transition of money, illicit funds. It could be goods and services in exchange, but typically it's financial, and you have to follow the flow of money, and that's when you get into money laundering or structuring for money laundering and where that flow of funding will go. Is it there to support other criminal activities, or is it there just to line the pockets of the individual that's doing the corruptive activity? If you're a victim of someone that scams you out of money, of course, financially you'll lose the money there, but it also, as far as like the payment card industry, that there's a cost to doing business, and if they incur a certain percentage of fraud loss, they have to pass that on. They're a business, and how they pass that on, it's typically to the public. You look at on the government side too, as far as the resources that you have to invest to actually identify and go after the criminals perpetrating these financial crimes. There's a couple cases recently where financial institutions almost went under because of financial crimes that were perpetrated against their institution, just because the insurance and all that wasn't even high enough to cover as far as the fraud losses. I think one of the biggest challenges investigating financial crimes is just the flow of communications or the coordination between the private sector and law enforcement. It's difficult enough if it affects several countries and law enforcement in those several countries have to investigate financial crime, but when you add the aspect of the private sector being involved with the much-needed information of that and have the flow in a timely manner so that law enforcement can respond adequately, because the private sector, a lot of times looking for the reputation of the company, so they don't want to release information unless they absolutely have to. In law enforcement, we need that information as soon as possible so that we can identify the criminals and then hopefully arrest them. In order to address corruption or financial crime issues, what we've set up is we have a workflow messaging system with a number of countries. We have seconded officers here from several different countries in both sections of financial crimes and our inter-corruption program, and they'll review these messages every day, and these are basically coming from our member countries asking for assistance, whether it's with the corruption investigation to identify assets, how to trace those and eventually recover those assets, or it might be specifically on a financial crimes fraud scheme that they're seeing. Seeing if we've heard about that before, other countries that might be affected, and then they'll ask if we can help with case coordination. Interpol also helps with setting up expert working group meetings. We set up one last year on social engineering fraud that proved to be quite successful and actually transitioned to an operation that we did last year called Operation First Light that involves six countries in Asia to do an Operation First Light 2015 that involves 23 countries, and it's still ongoing, but right now the success has been very good to date. Other things that we do is case coordination. If there's a case that involves several countries, we bring the countries together, the investigators and prosecutors together, like we did last year with the unlimited ATM cash out fraud scheme. It was 15 countries, investigators and prosecutors from all those 15 countries got together for two days, and in addition, we're members from the private sector that came in and shared information about how this fraud scheme occurred and then how the funds flew from one country to the next, and then how they were actually laundered in the end. And then we developed what's called best investigative guides, or kind of a go-to. So if you see a fraud scheme that's similar to this, that the country or the investigating agency now has a template of what to do so that they're not losing valuable time in the investigation trying to figure out what the next steps are. We get messages every day from the member countries about what they're seeing for financial crime fraud schemes, asking for assistance in those investigations. We routinely do workshops, training or capacity building training that helps our member countries to shore up or strengthen certain aspects of their investigator support that they have. And it might be within money laundering, asset identification, tracing, recovery to even cyber-enabled crimes, things like that. So Interpol is kind of the one-stop shop. And in addition, we do case coordination for member countries if there's a certain financial crime fraud scheme that they want us to help coordinate, then we can help facilitate that. The stronger that your network is internationally, the more effective that you'll be with addressing financial crimes at stand-age. Because a lot of the financial crimes that we're seeing doesn't happen traditionally just in one country, and that's it, it usually involves multiple countries. So the stronger that your network is within our member countries, the better chance that you'll have in a financial crime investigation.