Sharing a bedroom...and they will examine evidence provided, but it is difficult to disprove the genuineness of the relationship. After the fact, as we've spoken about, it's very difficult to re-examine a case or reopen that and prove that fraud is actually taking place because often it is the word of one aggrieved party against another. It's a he-said-she-said situation often, and difficult to prove. If we can establish fraud, and sometimes we can trace money changing hands, there are significant fines and imprisonment for providing false and misleading information to an immigration officer. Up to seven years in prison, a $100,000 fine, or both is on the table certainly for the courts. We have to get you some figures—I don't have them on hand—but I do not think it's very common for us to proceed with fraud prosecutions in these cases, just due to the difficulty in obtaining viable evidence and simply the court process itself.
We also tend to focus on systemic fraud in terms of large, wholesale organized fraud such as false job offers, etc. That's our priority rather than these one-off individual cases of fraud.