Thanks, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Hoover, for Canadians who are watching and have been following this, there are a lot of terms out there with regard to dangerous offenders and long-term offenders. There may be some confusion as to what each of those means. We've talked a lot about dangerous offenders, but could you set out what it is to be a long-term offender and what it means to get that designation? Also, how will the changes in Bill C-2 impact on the interplay between someone who is a dangerous offender but is being treated as a long-term offender and someone who is being treated as a dangerous offender, and how will that interplay change after this bill comes into force?