I don't think I can give you a figure. Moreover, in actual fact, I don't think adult sentences have been extensively used. That's one of the reasons why we wonder why the act currently in effect has to be amended.
Earlier, I spoke a little about the fact that it's called Sébastien's Law, to illustrate a situation in which the court decided to give an adolescent an adult sentence. It should be recalled that, in Quebec, the minimum age is 16, not 14. I'm very sensitive to the argument by the lady who talked about fairness for all children in Canada. In the other provinces, I believe an adolescent can be subject to an adult sentence at the age of 14. I believe you're aware of that. In Quebec, it's at the age of 16, because Quebec's National Assembly made that decision. There is the possibility, and, in my view, it must be limited as much as possible.
I just have one brief comment to make. I'm very concerned when authorities say they may perhaps place inmates who are not adults in a separate wing of the adult prison. In other words, they're going to subject young persons to that. We're going to place them in adult institutions, but set them up in a separate wing. It is very important to recall that a rehabilitation environment is not a detention environment. We detain youths in order to rehabilitate them, but it's not just a detention environment. And it's not because they're going to be separated from the others that they will be treated differently. I don't know whether you understand the distinction. It's very important in my mind.