The officers are completely autonomous in terms of the actions they take. That was what I had referenced in my speaking points.
The establishment of an independent branch in part creates that separation as well, so that we do not discuss any of the actions the officer wants to undertake unless we're reporting in terms of providing updates on outcomes. But the officers are unfettered in their discretion, their decision-making. They work with the Public Prosecution Service to try to determine whether or not a case will be taken forward to the courts, and we've made sure we've provided them with policies to help guide and inform them in terms of some of the decision-making they're allowed to do.
They're aware of the tools through extensive training. We conduct training on both sides of the operation—environmental, enforcement, standardized training—followed up by applied enforcement training that covers the peace officer powers. Between the training and the policies, they are unfettered in their decision-making.