Great. Thank you.
I have a couple of points, and my colleague may have more to add. It's similar to our conversation previously.
In the cases of suspected goods, they are not necessarily infringing goods, so there is a process of determining through the court whether what is being imported is actually infringing. With regard to putting the onus on the importer, as we discussed earlier, it may be determined through the courts that they are not actually infringing goods. I think that's an important point.
The other point is that the rights holders are currently not responsible for the storage and destruction costs of suspected goods that are the subject of a criminal investigation. Likewise, if Health Canada is conducting an investigation, the costs for those are not assumed by the rights holders. That does mitigate the costs for the rights holder.