Again, this is just my opinion, and certainly lots of people have different opinions. But those who work in the area of trauma and recovery talk about the importance of early intervention, as early as possible, to provide support for individuals who are going through the grief, the loss, the anger—they understand all those emotions—to try to assist them to get to a place where they can, at the very least, move on with their lives.
All the information I have, and certainly the information we've tried to implement in our family, is to ensure that as issues arise they're dealt with immediately and things are not held off.
There are very few examples. There was an example, it wasn't murder, but robbery victims in the U.K. A program was implemented by a police force there—it was a judge from here who had a family member experience it and related it to me—where after an offence had occurred and the investigation was completed, a team went in to try to put back the house, fix things up, and a team went in to try to provide therapeutic support to the victims immediately thereafter so they could move on as best they could, deal with the very real emotions, but move on. That's the best advice I've received consistently about what--