Let me comment on the one-sixth question, because as the former head of enforcement at the securities commission, one of the issues I had to deal with was the allocation of resources. There is a dynamic tension that exists when you're the head of a regulatory agency, a tension between trying to do what is necessary to protect the integrity of the market and trying to help injured investors get their money back.
When you look at the incarceration rates of white-collar criminals you have to look at the effect they have on both of those issues. I certainly am no expert on the effect of the deterrence value of putting Conrad Black or people like him in jail, but I can tell you that doing so makes it much more difficult for investors to hope to ever see their money back. To some extent, that is a choice the House will have to make as it considers this issue, because there's no easy answer for what to do on those issues.