What I'm implying—or I'm not implying it, I'm saying it—is that right now, under section 13, that's not investigated by the police. That's investigated by the commission itself, so through the commission and then through a tribunal.
At the end of the day, what I'm saying is that these offences are of a serious nature and should be investigated by the police. If you have a case of hate crime, it's serious, and it should be investigated by the police. It should be looked at in an open and transparent system with checks and balances such as we have in our Canadian judicial system under the Criminal Code of Canada. That's where it should be dealt with, not under a quasi-judicial body that often nobody hears or sees, where the rules of evidence ebb and flow on a daily basis, depending on who's presiding over the case. This is not, I believe, where these types of offences should be looked at.