Mr. Wallace, I think what the RCMP would tell you is that if the price is too good to be true, it's too good to be true. That's the first indicator.
If they were a little smarter, some of these people.... They're looking for quick bucks. It's easier to sell the set of golf clubs for $150 than for $800 or whatever it might be valued at. So they get the quick buck, they get the high margin, and they get it turned around. The actual cost might be $60 or whatever; it's hard to tell.
Mr. Gagachev has a moulded-case circuit breaker in front of you, and he'd be hard pressed to tell, if somebody had a really good knock-off, unless he went inside that unit, whether it was defective or counterfeit or not.
So it's hard to tell. To the untrained eye, it's very difficult. That's why we like to spend time with Border Services Canada to train them. We train the RCMP and we train other police forces to try, but it's a huge problem. We don't have enough staff or finances to do it. It's really a drop in the bucket, what we are trying to prove.
So as the first indicator, if somebody offers you something at a really good price, chances are it's a counterfeit.