I want to say to you, Mr. Fowler, that you are the first witness who has brought to our attention, very helpfully, that the honest mistake could still be something that would lead to a prosecution for murder. That is very sobering, indeed, when you think of the consequences of that. You've given us a proposed amendment to it.
I'm going to throw something slightly different at you. I know you're the defence lawyer, but the question we had from the civil lawyers who advise the CMPA, the Canadian Medical Protective Association, looking at the same clause that you talked about, was that they ought to extend it to civil and disciplinary proceedings for practitioners, because of, I presume, wrongful death claims, where mens rea wouldn't be the standard. It would be a lower standard, and in fact it would be worse for the doctors. If anything could be worse than a charge of murder, they could also find themselves with huge damage claims, because that's, I think, equally relevant there. Do you agree?