Yes, I can. First of all, in what we were talking about here—they're conservative numbers—we estimate fraud is costing Canadians at least $3 billion because it's passed on to them in premiums. The project I'm talking about, only one project out of an average of 30 big ones a year that we investigate, has a potential cost of between $20 million and $25 million, passed on to the consumers.
What we're finding is that, if we take the example of these staged accidents, they were not only claiming for false damage to the vehicles that may not have even actually been in a real collision, so you have specific body shops repairing those vehicles over and over again, replacing the panels with good ones; those individuals involved are loading up their vehicles and making claims for accident benefits for loss of income, attendant care, home maintenance, and it just goes on and on. Plus there's a whole ton of assessments that have to take place between doctors and the insurance companies, and it just adds up and adds up.
So the amount we're talking about is significant.