Right, or the one that you're most likely to get a conviction with. That's the way you proceed with them. You want to go through all of that.... I guess here's the question I have if we're looking at it from the perspective of the victim. I appreciate the fact that we're looking at the overall sentiment of the justice system and what it's supposed to be doing, but if we put on the lens of a victim and just ask ourselves about it from the victim's perspective, and they have to relive it.... We've heard about the traumatization of having to relive the crime all the time. How many of these dangerous offenders or people who are charged with some of these crimes actually get parole eligibility before their sentence is up?
That's notwithstanding the fact that the faint hope clause has now been repealed, but that doesn't go back retroactively. Can somebody give me some edification as to how many people who do these kinds of crimes actually get parole?