On the 600 hours, 300 for the crown, 300 for the police, we begin this by going to the national flagging system and asking if they have any file material. We then go to the Correctional Service of Canada if the individual has a federal criminal record. In Ontario we go to the MCSCS, which is the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, to find out if he has any provincial record, and that would include the probation records, for example. Then we look for CAS records, school records, police records across Canada or outside Canada. As you can see, the information-gathering process is very daunting.
We've streamlined much of it simply by building relationships with these different ministries, with the federal and provincial ministries. So that's brought us forward, probably shaved at least a hundred hours off every case.