Mrs. Scanlan, you mentioned this, and it is something this other police officer and I talked about: the toll this takes on people who have to work with it.
Ms. Kohan, you mentioned the sampling of the evidence. This officer said to me, “Look, I see this stuff all day long.” It's stuff that probably people around this committee haven't seen, so we very much are looking at things in the abstract on what's on the Internet. Even the judges who are hearing cases do not want to see all the evidence. They want to see a sampling of the evidence, but they don't want to see everything the police officer has to see.
This is all in the context of this bill of child sexual exploitation. Someone hit that nail on the head. A 14- or 15-year-old does not have to prove that he or she did not consent. That's what this bill does. It says that our 14- and 15-year-olds are off limits to people, whether they're in Canada or coming to Canada to have relationships with teenagers. It says that 14-year-olds and 15-year-olds are off limits.
Perhaps someone could comment on that, on the toll this takes on police officers who have to deal with it every day.