Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, Mr. Stamatakis, for your service and for appearing today.
Thank you, Mr. Bytensky. As a one-time defence lawyer, I know it's not always the most popular seat to be in. You probably get a lot of commentary. I do appreciate the fact that you're prepared to take the time here to tell us where you stand and your views.
Mr. Bytensky, I want to talk about something we haven't talked at all about here in committee. It's the principle of bail review. If you want to look at the Constable Pierzchala case, my understanding was that it was actually a bail review, although I haven't referred to it.
I'm going to summarize, and you can tell me if I'm accurate. You'll initially have a bail hearing when somebody comes into custody and the Crown seeks that person's detention. That has to happen by law, absent some nuanced circumstances. It's suppose to happen within 24 hours. Is that accurate?