Yes, I can, specifically on the first oneāand I'll get back to the other member's comment about indecent acts . What I'm speaking to you about is very tame, because I live in a very ugly world. What happens in a practical application of what's going on is that in Internet luring offences with young people, it is a matter of seconds before someone is exposing themselves inappropriately in front of a webcam in front of people.
What we traditionally charge people with in these cases is committing an indecent act. The change in this legislation gives more teeth and gives the charge a specific identification as to what is going on. That helps law enforcement a lot, with a definition of what the specific offence was.
The second offence that's created is that these like-minded people are often offering up their children to do sexual things. Basically, what they're doing is prostituting their children out. Until such a time as the act is committed, that is not an offence. The creation of this legislation creates an offence just by virtue of the agreement that's going on between the two like-minded individuals. So it puts a lot more teeth, from an investigative perspective, in the legislation.