A certain part of our committee—we have Dr. Bowes, our chief medical examiner from Nova Scotia— is going to be looking at best practices across Canada in those situations. The police are doing it from an investigative perspective and learning what needs the coroners have in those situations.
You're right. Ten years ago when someone died from an opiate or an overdose, it was automatically determined that it was a coroner's case. Now what we're seeing is it's not just a coroner's case. This can have some police ramifications, not just from the investigative perspective that someone trafficked, but it could be that you have some doctor or physician or prescriber. That's the difficulty.
The other issue we have to wrestle with is that quite often we release the scene only to find out three months later that the person was full of a drug that they weren't prescribed, etc. That presents a lot of difficulty for police from an investigative perspective.