I don't get into the particulars of any exact case. I have heard, though, from law enforcement agencies that they find the whole area very complicated and not as helpful, quite frankly, as it should be.
You will note, though, in the legislation that we have, first of all, corrected the problem with respect to the timeliness of the arrest by putting in the reasonable period of time. But you will notice as well that there are provisions within here that you have to only exercise this right when it is unreasonable or unfeasible to have somebody in the law enforcement community do this. This is so we don't have people doing this themselves unless it's necessary, because these are inherently dangerous situations here, and we don't want people to unnecessarily hurt themselves and get involved with something much more serious than what they are trying to correct.
I think that is a reasonable provision to put into the Criminal Code, as is the provision that you must, within a reasonable period of time, turn that individual over to law enforcement agencies. We don't want to have a situation where people have some sort of a right to detain someone or imprison someone. That's not the role of an individual citizen. After they have effected a citizen's arrest, it's to turn that individual over to law enforcement agencies as quickly as possible, and that is what is preserved and made explicit in this piece of legislation.