To your last point I can't be specific about that definition and so forth. I can just speak to our issue and what we do see.
When we look at the two types of crimes we primarily deal with.... And one of the biggest challenges we deal with daily is, as I mentioned, that in much of the imagery of child abuse we process we don't know who the victims are. We have a whole problem of even including when we have people going before the courts and looking at the impact when we can't even identify those victims because...maybe they have been charged with possession of material on their hard drives. So we have that.
But the other point I would like to make, and the one we have talked about mostly within our 30 years of doing this work, is when we see some of the most—and they are very rare—high-profile child abduction cases where children are taken and there's a duration before the child's even located, we've heard from friends of the victim, immediate family members, neighbourhoods completely impacted and traumatized by that event.
I think when we look at community impact and that consideration, from our agency's view it's an important one.