Typically, things don't come through the U.S., because they do a better job of dealing with counterfeit shipments at the border than Canada does. As is the case with Canada, in the U.S. it's hit and miss as well. There's a good example from the port in Prince Rupert, B.C. The CBSA group there said they were not going to inspect any containers that went outside of their region any more, and when they decided to do that, that meant every container went through unchecked.
There's a project the RCMP in the Toronto North detachment have been doing called Project O-Scorpion—I think because it's Division O of the RCMP—and in just a seven-month period they've found containers with close to $70 million worth of counterfeit goods. They're just scratching the surface.
Now, for our company, it's not so much the containers as it is the small packages in the mail and courier services. It's very easy to do business over the Internet. It's easy to do business with people overseas. When you do business with people overseas and you place an order, those shipments come in through the mail and through a courier. Less than 1% of things coming in get looked at by CBSA, and counterfeit product is flooding into the country that way.