That's precisely the issue we had with the casinos in British Columbia. People were filling out forms and it just became rote after a while and no one was really looking past the paper and saying, let's delve into this. Where exactly did this money come from? What bank account? Can we trace this? Where is the ultimate ownership? Once we started doing that, all of a sudden the suspicious transactions plummeted.
I don't really see it any differently. That's why the Attorney General at the time said, let's take a look at other sectors of the economy, because we also know that if you clean up one area, people are going to move into another, particularly if you're talking about investors. These don't necessarily have to be the organized criminals themselves; these can be people somewhere in that chain.
It's not just organized crime money; it's also, as I mentioned, capital outflow. Lots of countries have currency controls. You can't bring money out of those countries, so people try to bring it out through different investment means, and you also have tax evasion money.