I think what I have called the reverse onus or the presumption clause will assist. From my limited experience with victims and in my discussions with our three front-line workers, when particularly a trafficked woman is removed from the circumstances and has three months, six months, nine months of normal life, if that's what it's called, sometimes in a different city or a different province, particularly Vancouver often, they come back to be revictimized, and there's the pressure...the quote we often hear, if I can paraphrase it, is that if they don't perform, which is kind of an ironic way to say it, this case goes down the tubes. It's all on their shoulders.
So again, with this presumption it will assist that there will be other evidence gathered, and if a case can be built on top of that testimony, so that it's not the only testimony available, even from a psychological or subconscious view, it will make women in particular feel better in coming forward, because it feels like the system is on their side as opposed to on the traffickers' side.