Certainly. It's inherent in the fact that we've heard that these groups are just trying to scam the system, they're liars, or they're trying to jump the queue. We've heard comments such as this. It becomes problematic when we're dealing with certain officers within certain regions, within Ontario, trying to get them to overcome those bias issues that they bring with them. Yes, these become problematic.
It's not just one point of the system; it's somehow within the whole gamut of the system where things become problematic. Differential treatment doesn't start just in one place and stop at another level. It goes right through the system and we're seeing that happen.
When you have people then getting lawyers, it becomes an expensive process for Canada. I can certainly talk about the AI example. They often lose their cases. It becomes very expensive to administer that, in having to overturn and going through the court system, and so on, but it's also expensive for the client. The concern is why certain groups are being asked certain levels of questions throughout the whole system, and not others.