I would say that in my experience of dealing with our law enforcement officials at the front lines, those who are empowered to take action have an effect. We've seen instances, coming out of either national training sessions or online sessions, in which we'll be contacted by on-the-street officers informing us that a suspected counterfeit product is being offered in either a smaller store or through other means. We take action with that. If they're given the ability and the empowerment to at least seize and detain and then communicate with the rights holder or the property holder, that's a big step.
I think we have to continue to focus on putting the onus back on the counterfeiter. Counterfeiters are not going to have large amounts of formal records to help in going back to pursue civil remedies. We may get judgments in Federal Court against them, but collecting on those damages is virtually impossible. We'll spends hundreds of thousands of dollars with our investigators on a yearly basis and with our legal counsel making claims. We get judgments against counterfeiters across the country on a regular basis, but we can't collect on those.