The simple answer is no, because of the point I made earlier about how the data is collected. What I can tell you is that law societies—all but our tiniest law societies.... And as you'll appreciate, we have three northern law societies that are required to do all of the same things as the larger law societies, but they are very, very under-resourced, so they face more challenges with some of these activities and need to turn to some of their other fellow law societies to help them with this. It may be a little more ad hoc, but all other law societies have regular audit programs that are random. I can tell you that the frequency ranges. For example, in Prince Edward Island, they audit every law firm every year. In Ontario it would be roughly every law firm every five years. In Manitoba, I believe it's something like every law firm every three years. That just gives you a sample.
I mention that because when they go in and audit, in addition to looking at good accounting practices and compliance with the trust regulations of the law society, they are looking specifically at no cash, and client identification and verification. The way these audits are done, as you can appreciate, is much the same as when have your books audited in your company. Your sample files are pulled, and if they have any concerns about what they see, they pull more and look at them, as well as looking at all of the actual ledgers and transactions, of course.