I'll take a different opinion. On our large organized crime cases, a lot of them we work very closely with Public Prosecution Service of Canada because the charges primarily are federal charges in the drug thing. We work closely with the crown or prosecutor assigned immediately. Disclosure is ongoing from day one of our organized crime cases. We've learned because of the volume that we have to work immediately with our friends at public prosecution service, so the amount of disclosure we have to make to keep up with our requirements by law is massive.
Any communication, verbal, any time we're meeting with witnesses, CIs, etc., that is all recorded and is disclosed, and there's lots of it. But to combat that we are now integrated with public prosecution service from day one. We're working towards disclosure. We are going to electronic disclosure to try to unburden—we can't keep up with volumes, and it's unfair for us to turn up at somebody's thing and drop off 50 banker's boxes full of documents. I'm not exaggerating there; that is a real issue that we have. So we are going electronic. I talked about the web-based solutions. I gave the example of Project Sharq in Quebec, which used it, so we are trying to move ahead and we're working with our colleagues across the country to stay ahead of disclosure. So we're very involved in it, and I think we're doing an excellent job of working with our crowns.