We may do that; I don't know. It might be an interesting approach to try to address the more serious crimes where, for reasons we're not exactly sure, a conditional sentence was imposed, and the press likes the story and we get some of the facts but not all the facts. So I may look at that later.
Secondly, when the justice minister was here he hazarded a guess at a figure of additional cost that might be there for the provinces for incarceration if we were to move to the regime under Bill C-9. I forgot the number, but it was 20-something million bucks. Would you be able to give us a prison-day incarceration volume that might be there if we went to Bill C-9?
I see the difficulty, because not every case where there's an application of Bill C-9 is actually going to get an incarceration sentence; a judge may move to probation as an alternative sentence, or suspend the sentence rather than giving a conditional.
If I, as a lay person, were to say maybe half the cases now getting conditional sentences in Bill C-9 were to involve incarceration, I could then do a workup mathematically of what it would cost, knowing that it's about $200 a day per inmate. But we'd need some data to show us.
Your charts here come close to that, showing the number of cases that would be affected by Bill C-9, using the current data. So is that data...? Maybe the chart now is good enough. Is it?