What I can speak to is what we know and what we've seen in the data. I'll reiterate some of the information that we do know in terms of statistics.
We do know from our 2004 general social survey on victimization—this covers the population for ages 15 and over, it doesn't cover the population under the age of 15—that 8% of sexual assaults come to the attention of the police. That we do know. We know that once the incidents are reported to the police, there are three things that can happen: they can be cleared by charge, cleared otherwise, or unsolved. We know that the charge rate for other sexual offences was low relative to other violent offences. So we do know that.
What we can't speak to are underlying reasons for why certain incidents may or may not be resulting in a charge or the laying of a charge. What we can speak to a bit—and I will draw your attention to one of the supplementary slides in our data package—is what we've learned from our general social survey of 15-year-olds and older on reasons for not reporting to the police. That's on page 9.
I'll reiterate that this covers the population for ages 15 and over, and it provides some information—from those who did not report the incidents to police—on the most frequently occurring reasons. You'll see that the victim saying that the incident was not important enough to the victim to report it to the police, that it was dealt with in another way, or that it was a personal matter are among the most frequently occurring reasons being cited for not reporting to the police.
As for the—