I'm going to leave that one aside and just move on to a couple of others, because clearly we're not going to end up agreeing.
I'll ask my questions really quickly.
I want to draw your attention to two cases that you'll probably both remember. The first one was Mariam—I'm going to pronounce the name wrong, and apologies to the family—Makhniashvili in Toronto. She went missing in September 2009 and was missing until March 2012. Then it was discovered that it had actually been a suicide, that she'd tragically jumped from a bridge over the 401. The second case is Brandon Crisp. He was missing for three weeks, and again, it was a misadventure. He had fallen out of a tree at that point.
For families like that, where after a three-year-period you discover that it was something like a suicide, is your legislation contemplating clawing money back, which was provided to those families for support? I don’t understand the threshold.