If I can use an example, one international investigation that was successful was led by the FBI. This was a case of high-level hackers—people who would decipher the codes on software and then sell it. Some of the best people in the world were doing this. It resulted in 90 searches being conducted in 12 different countries simultaneously. The coordination on that was absolutely incredible, but it took down the whole network.
That's the way it should be done, but in most cases it's not, because we simply don't have the resources to do that. Normally we take out one level. It's just like drugs. We take out perhaps the middle level, and somebody down the road fills it in, or the same person comes back. So there's definitely an issue there. It's not as if we're doing nothing. We're doing about 400 investigations a year, but we could easily be doing ten times that if we had the resources.