Okay. Fantastic.
My next question is for you, Greg. You're a pretty sophisticated victim, and I say that with the greatest of respect. A lot of folks don't have.... I have very limited legal training due to my law enforcement background, and that only gets me so far into the system before folks like crown prosecutors and so on take over. My questions are based from that kind of perspective.
You're a very sophisticated person, who became sophisticated and knew what was going on, and yet you still felt like you were a victim. The interesting thing I got out of all of this was that a victim starts feeling like a victim right away. The legal system—I'll call it a legal system, and I'll get to my next question after this—doesn't produce a result until we go through the legal process. Meanwhile, all the way through that process the victim still feels like a victim.
I'm just wondering; you talked about their not being guilty until proven so in a court of law and so on. Do the provisions in this bill go far enough insofar as making the victim feel like they're more adequately taken care of, in your opinion? You said you agreed with the government's perspective on this bill. Have we actually gone far enough in the legislation?