My argument then, coming from a law enforcement background, is obviously having enough tools and having enough enforcement capability. The answer is that nobody has been caught and nobody has been charged. I would submit to you that the challenge with this is that the laws, being what they are and being what they're being changed to, may actually provide law enforcement officials with a little more flexibility when it comes to actually bringing somebody to justice.
If the industry is serious about this, which you say you are, then I don't understand some of the issues with the provision of the changes that we have in this legislation. If you want the guilty people to be caught, brought to justice, and held accountable for some of these things, which I think most Canadians would agree are very serious matters, then the law enforcement agency has to have mechanisms available to make sure that they can, first of all, stop something from happening. Obviously ships can be brought in, we can stop the conveyance, we can bring them in, but there also have to be mechanisms that allow law enforcement officers to be able to do their job and get this before a court.