There are two answers to that question, depending on which statistics. In large part, it is not a matter of finding them in Statistics Canada's collection; they just have not been collected. Statistics Canada cannot collect all possible; therefore they have collected only some of the important statistics, either for cost interest or freedom of information limitations. Bail statistics, as this committee so profoundly knows, have been unavailable. They just haven't been collected.
The second answer is that, as you can see from tables 1 and 5, Statistics Canada has statistics but it hasn't pulled them out and displayed them in the ways that I have or that other researchers have. So these are good statistics, but one has to go looking for them and pull them out specially. There's nothing forced or phony about them; they're just not the ones that Statistics Canada usually produces. It depends on further analysis, and that's why I thought it was important to bring it to you.
Does that answer your question?