There is a certain amount of money that is given out, which can be useful to people. I agree. I don't think it's applicable in quite the same way, but I think it's at a level of the same kind of approach for those people who are involved in organized crime and who are part of the family--they're supported in some way and protected by it.
The arguments around this are that you can use.... I think South Africa has produced its own version of RICO to deal with organized crime and gangs in places like Cape Flats. Many people within South Africa have argued that this is never going to deal with the roots of these problems because there will be many more young people, young men, growing up to take the place of the ones you imprison, and you'll just have to build more prisons all the time. So you really have to begin to work on those other places too.
I think the same issues apply here. We've had, as we've talked about, some very good successes in Canada. I remember there were a lot of issues with gangs in the 1970s in B.C. This wasn't organized crime so much, but it might have touched it at one end. And very successful initiatives by the B.C. government really reduced those problems by working at the community level providing alternatives for young people, trying to re-educate them, change their attitudes towards high-risk violence.