They can misclassify them. They can, as you say, say that it's only this much or it's from this country. When we have a measure in force as a result of our investigations and we're applying duties to imports from a given country of a given product, we have the ability to identify those and correct them. In those cases there can be an advance monetary penalty. The maximum penalty is $25,000, but those penalties can be issued in that regard.
Where people are being mischievous, if you will, and trying to deceive by avoiding application of duties that are protecting Canadian jobs and companies, we have new authorities called anti-circumvention investigations, and that's about giving us the ability to identify and quickly go after companies that may be actually physically altering a product, for example.
Take, for example, puncturing holes in waterproof rubber footwear to evade a measure in force for those types of products, and then after it's imported, fixing it so that it is once again waterproof. That gives us new authority to go after those kinds of activities.