Absolutely, hence the significance of our national computer database, with all of these crime groups; and as you've heard, there are more than 900 of them. It wasn't that many years ago that we really didn't know how many organized crime groups were out there. Now we've been able to identify more than 970 such groups, place them on a specific map, and analyze their activities to the extent that we can through aggressive and progressive law enforcement action. So as they move about, it is for the most part not unknown to us, because with all the municipalities that participate in a very meaningful way by putting their investigations onto the national database, that information is then available to every jurisdiction that is plugged into that system.
I ought to tell you that there are more than 250 such agencies that use that database each and every day. This year there were more than two million transactions on that database, and there are no fewer than 2,400 users who have the ability to log on and do their investigative research.