I hope I didn't suggest that the civil law countries don't have constitutional frameworks that include guarantees of rights. They're all parties, I think, to the European Convention on Human Rights, but the manner in which the rights are guaranteed is somewhat different from one set of constitutional guarantees to another, and our charter is somewhat different in that regard. There are a number of approaches that European countries have taken to a variety of issues, but when we've looked at the same issue in terms of whether or not there could possibly be a successful challenge under our own charter, the situation does seem to be different.
But yes, I'm talking about two things, really--the various guarantees in the charter that have to do with freedom of association and the various criminal law guarantees of the presumption of innocence, and what has to be demonstrated and proven to substantiate a criminal charge. These are issues that a court might accept, but we don't know that at this point.