This precedes the assessment. The first stage, prior to an assessment, is that the crown has to bring an application to the court under part XXIV for a dangerous offender proceeding. So the first step is that they apply to the court and they argue before the court that the individual has a threshold conviction--either a serious personal injury offence or one of the three sexual offences designated. Then the crown is applying for the psychiatric assessment.
But to get there, I guess what I'm suggesting is that the crown has to make the decision right at sentencing that that's what they're going to do. I think the concern was by some provincial attorneys general, by the federal attorney general, that in some cases the crowns were unable to turn their attention to this adequately for a number of reasons, I guess, so the crown declaration is specifically not to bind the crown to--