As I said, my intent was threefold.
Certainly, there's that innate trust we have of the police and others, the firemen, to protect us, to be there.
As we get older, we find ourselves in different situations. I've come upon accidents where I know that I've had to call the police, and they come, and you're there to help them do a job, one which not very many people really want to be part of. It's then you get to understand how serious their job is.
Then when someone takes that and turns it upside down and because of that type of activity destroys the trust that you have, I think that's important.
When I've been discussing this with different individuals, that's what they were talking about, that they work so hard to try to do their job, which is a very difficult job, and then they have this type of a ruse that's coming in and destroying that. Maybe it's not destroying it from the point of view that so many people know about it—they're only going to hear about some of the really major cases—but it's also destroying it for that individual.
That's really what we're talking about. We're talking about it here during this the National Victims of Crime Awareness Week. I think this is really significant.