I have no doubt that the notoriety of the family has tainted the case, to the extent that he has been an extremely unpopular figure who is very divisive. The level of vitriol that one sees, for example, when Omar Khadr stories appear in The Globe and Mail in those commentaries that people can enter.... There's a very acrimonious debate.
It's also the case, however, that whenever someone is accused of terrorism or terrorism affiliation there is a rush to judgment, I think, especially in circumstances where that person is incarcerated overseas by an ally in the campaign against terrorism. I think we have to be very wary of that propensity and extend diplomatic protection and consular access with vigour, irrespective of the nature of the charges against the individual or the family from which they come.