In terms of tools for that, I think we have largely what we need. Where we're trying to put a lot of emphasis right now is in the area of education and prevention. I say enforcement is very costly; the better we can do at educating and awareness to prevent these crimes, the greater impact for Canadians.
I'll just mention one thing that we're trying to do right now. Because a lot of the victims who are targeted are right across the country and any one particular area may only have a small number of victims, locally it may not look like there's any major type of criminal activity taking place. However, when you take that right across the country, instead of a pocket of ten victims out in northern British Columbia, now you have several thousand victims across the country being perpetrated by one organization. One thing we're trying to put a lot of emphasis on is getting all that intelligence in as real time as possible, to bring it together so we're able to see very soon, at least in the early stages, that it isn't a small-scale fraud, it is a large-scale fraud with multiple victims across the country. The quicker we can see that, the quicker we can get out with public messaging to Canadians and try to prevent, educate, and make them aware of this activity happening so that when it does come to their community or they get calls, or messages over the Internet, they're aware. That is the key to prevention, and it's a challenge.