Mr. Chair, I deal with these cases in the following way. When we have a civil case, or when we're dealing with the police without the proceeds legislation, we go in— Let's say, we go in with a court order. We want to get their assets, but we don't have sufficient information about their assets. As a civil remedy, we don't have access to the information the police do, so we can't grab the assets. Even though under the legislation we're allowed to, we just don't know what their assets are, so we can't get the assets. We find the counterfeiter who's been doing this for a long period of time, we take whatever product they have, but we never get the assets.
If we have the legislation changed, now we go in with the police. The police have the information, and they grab the assets as they're going in. They grab the product. Now they have somebody who has been charged, who is going to go through the court process, and lo and behold, at the end of the day the government has all the assets, which, as I said before, will likely be more than the cost to the government of actually doing that case.