For the court documents, sir, we need certified copies of the information or indictment. We need certified transcripts. We need the exhibit list and all the documentary exhibits that went with it. All of that material, as well as the police materials, is relevant to the court process. It goes far broader than that, and I'll start to answer one of your other questions, if I may, briefly.
I'm reading from a book called Without Conscience, by Dr. Robert Hare. Dr. Hare is the creator of a PCL-R, psychopathy checklist-revised. It's a risk assessment instrument that is used throughout the world, and it's probably the leading risk assessment instrument. In fact, it forms the basis for many of the other risk assessment instruments.
For example, there has to be consideration given to how the individual was behaving at the point in time when he was reaching puberty. Dr. Hare indicates that these factors--and I'll go through them very quickly--are relevant: repetitive casual and seemingly thoughtless lying; apparent indifference to or inability to understand the feelings, expectation, or pain of others; defiance of parents, teachers, and rules; continually in trouble and unresponsive to reprimands and threats of punishment; petty theft from other children; apparent persistent aggression, bullying, fighting; and it goes on with sexual precociousness, vandalism, bedwetting, fire-setting, and cruelty to animals.
That's the information we have to gather about one individual as a child. When the individual is an adult, such things as glib and superficial personality, egocentric and grandiose character, lack of remorse or guilt, lack of empathy, deceitful and manipulative shallow emotions.... And I've just covered half the list for the adults.