We've run into a real difficult time getting police to take these investigations. First of all, they're only going to take high-priority investigations, for one thing. They're overloaded. They want to deal with the more serious crimes of personal harm—assault, attempted murder, murder, things like that—and unfortunately, with their limited resources, these departments are small...that will have a fraud component to the police. They'll only take the more serious ones, the ones that actually have been investigated fairly thoroughly and put into a crown brief sort of format, which takes an extensive amount of work on our part. Then at that point in time we'll meet with the police officer who's in charge of accepting investigations and we'll run it through with them, showing them the connections, the social networking among the parties. But their ability to take on these investigations is fairly limited. They're only going to take on the high-priority ones.
Now, the other thing that we do is share investigations with the Financial Services Commission of Ontario, and as a result of doing that as well, they have laid numerous charges and actually shut down illegal operations. Unfortunately, the police over the years have kept reducing their head count in the areas of insurance crime and have concentrated in areas where personal harm exists.