I'm sorry. I forgot about the translation.
In any event, let me summarize by saying there's a great long legal phrase, and what I'd like us to do before we're finished with this bill is to remember two things. First of all, we're not talking about the victim's family, because the victim's family are victims. They are suffering the loss of a loved one in a murder, and they are consumed by grief. Their emotions are upset and roiled, and they are not lawyers.
I maintain that having two contradictory statements placed before them by the judge is an inadequate way to communicate to them that the accused is not receiving 25 years without parole.
In any event, the other thing I'd like to ask about is the idea that faint hope reduces problems for prison guards. I wonder if you or the department have any statistics or any evidence that indicates there is a difference in the injuries or deaths to prison guards caused by persons who have faint hope for parole and those who have not.