Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Good afternoon, Mr. Dagenais. Thank you for coming. You told me that you had to brave the storm, so I'm very happy that you made it here safe and sound.
I would like to focus on some of the statements you made. You said that, in general, this could make the work of the police easier. Given the way in which the bill has been prepared, a serious offence is not any old crime, like shoplifting, that occurs every day. We are talking about serious offences. These usually involve property with a value greater than $5,000, offences that endanger the life of another person, public mischief, unauthorized possession of a firearm, and so on. Those are serious offences. They are what we want to come to grips with first.
I would like to know what you think about another point. In Quebec, just like in the other provinces—it is wrong for us to imagine that we are somehow different—when a young person has committed a number of offences, there are lot of extrajudicial measures. You know as well as I do that it is very hard to find out what kind of extrajudicial measures have been imposed on the person. A person can have been to court up to seven times and have received extrajudicial measures without anyone knowing, because everything is confidential, they are not transferred, and so on.
First, are you in favour of the justice system being informed about extrajudicial measures that have been imposed on young offenders so that the progression can be seen? Quite often, judges are not aware. Today, they are never aware, and that will not change unless records like that are kept.
You say that it will make police work easier. Do you think that it could help you to know which extrajudicial measures have been imposed on the young offender, say, in the last eight years?