Of course, it's reasonable. We should expect that.
The only thing I'd say is that things aren't black and white. Our criminal justice system is a good example of that. We expect people to obey the law. If they don't obey the law, there are consequences. The consequences depend on how serious the violation is, whether it's a one-off or whether it's a pattern. The same thing should apply to immigration.
I talk to people and your average person—I come from Calgary and you can imagine I hear it all the time—thinks it should be zero tolerance, but zero tolerance doesn't really work. Human beings are far more complex than that. When you get somebody who comes as an infant and they're here for 20 years or 30 years before this kind of thing happens, it's a little harder to apply zero tolerance to them.