In terms of the particular concerns around incentives, which was the first part of your question, and the specific element, as was noted previously, of offering rewards for information to be provided, our analysis is that in the countries where, unfortunately, the reality is that a lot of these cases happen, the individuals who have that type of information are often close to, or have links to, the entities that actually have taken individuals captive. That's where our concern is.
By offering financial incentives to individuals, an unintended implication could be that the information would go into the hands of close collaborators or to those close to the organizations that have actually taken individuals captive. When I say that we want to actually break that business model, it's because our objective is to always and continually not put any financial....
It's obviously illegal to have finances for terrorists, as you noted. We don't want to have any means by which public funds could ever inadvertently end up in the hands of criminal groups or terrorist organizations. That would be a major concern with the proposal outlined in this bill.