Yes. There are jurisdictions—certainly Ontario is one, and my friend can speak to others—where pawnshops are required to track the customers and the merchandise, and law enforcement can have access to that to try to trace back to who had the stolen property and maybe where it came from, and go from there. I think there is probably some guidance there.
I would say one thing about the difference between stolen property and child pornography, even if it is just possessing the photos. From our perspective, and I think from the victim's perspective, that is not just a form of possession; it is a form of abuse that someone is using those images of those children for that person's own satisfaction. We know that some offenders use it to break down the barriers of other children, to show them that maybe this is kind of normal and then facilitate their own abuse.