That was the whole purpose for the creation of FINTRAC here in Canada. There's an obligation upon banks and these financial institutions proactively to look at, in this case, transactions of $10,000 or more, and for various criteria in those training programs put in place. When they look at that, then they ship that off to FINTRAC, which is under the Department of Finance, and they do financial intelligence analysis to ascertain if these are suspicious transactions. They have, clearly, the expertise there through accountants and so on, and they then take that, as I pointed out, into actionable intelligence to share with CSIS and with the RCMP, as well as with provincial and municipal police forces in Canada who share information with them.
They do that analysis that you're talking about. That's a partnership between the public sector and a government institution, financial intelligence—