Here's my science answer because I'm not a lawyer. Thankfully, I haven't had any run-ins with justice.
We know individuals have severe neurodevelopmental deficits. We know they don't learn from experience. We know they don't understand consequence. I'm saying this in general terms because there are both ends of the spectrum, and we know that. There are brain tests that show this dysfunction.
We also know, from evidence, that individuals with neurocognitive deficits don't do well in other types of system treatment outcomes, for example substance abuse. They forget to come to group, all of that. That's from U.S. data, so it's a little bit by proxy, which means that we're making a bit of a leap on what makes sense. The interpretation of that within the justice context may be better left to people who understand the justice context, but that's what we know empirically and that's true.
I'm happy to share with you our draft paper that's not published yet on the characteristics of the individuals in our database. That might be helpful. It's the first Canadian data that exists. We're getting ready to submit that for publication. That may show you the depth of impairment and where people are impaired, and that might help.