No, sir.
For a parole violation, it really requires intervention of the parole authority. We bring that information to their attention. It sometimes requires us to go back a second time. If we catch somebody in violation of parole conditions, we notify the parole authority, who then may take out a warrant for that individual. Then we go back and find him again. There are some real limitations on what we can do.
We have proven very effective, by the way, in enforcing conditional release conditions: curfews, non-associations, residency requirements. Those things have been very effective tools for us in maintaining some control over offenders in the community. Our ability to control people who are on probation and parole is somewhat more limited. But it requires us to form better partnerships with the parole and probation authorities, and we're trying to do that.