We believe that should be done with great care. Obviously, any barriers that would stand in the way of reintegrating a young person, whether it is entering a school system where one is already inclined to give up on them or assist them, or whether it's looking for work, which we know has a tremendous impact on giving young people a sense that it's worth turning their lives around....
It is amazing when I see it. Generally, whether it's good kids at university with academic problems or kids with complex needs, if they believe there is a job they love at the end of the rainbow, they're actually more likely to turn around. The incentive to succeed is actually a more powerful tool with young people than fear of punishment if they have no reason.
In that sense, we would always be very prudent. As an attorney general, even if this were changed, in terms of our instruction to prosecutors, frankly, if we're not moving it into adult court, we likely would instruct our prosecutors not to look at the publication ban. If it's serious enough to lift that, they should be in adult court, which is where we want our violent offenders anyway.