Thank you.
My question is also for Mr. Sullivan. It seems to me, when discussing child pornography, we're really dealing with two distinct offences. One is the original violation, which I guess could be generally characterized as a form of rape; and the second is the continued possession and circulation of the images after the fact. Of course, both are affronts to basic human dignity, but it seems to me they are different, in the same sense that robbery, which would be the homologue to the first of the offences, is distinct from possession of stolen property after the fact of the original offence.
In trying to think how to deal at a practical level with the second of the two offences, given that the first could have occurred at some point in the past, it might be impossible to identify the person to whom the violation occurred, and they may be deceased, for that matter. There is a very high probability that the original offence occurred outside of Canada—probably likelier than not, I suppose, as a statistical matter. I don't know that for sure, but it seems likely. Given that, if the second offence is treated as a form of possession of stolen property, it seems to me there is a logical pattern for dealing with it.
I noticed, actually, following this thought along, that you had made reference to the example of pawnshops and the requirements that are placed upon pawnshops. If we use the pawnshop as the analogy to an Internet service provider, I wonder if there is some direction there as to how the law ought to be recrafted in order to ensure some sort of more effective method of enforcing efforts to remove these images and their circulation.