Certainly. To your point, it's not necessarily the traumatic and graphic images—in some ways, those are obvious and they do stick with you—but the procedure itself and the legal challenge. I know of a juror who felt incredible guilt and anxiety because an acquittal was the result of the trial. That is justice delivered. Jurors are judges of the facts, and the facts in that case did not meet a conviction. That's a fact; that's what happened.
That is justice delivered, but that individual and individuals on that case still felt enormous guilt and enormous anxiety. It stayed with them for years because they felt that they hadn't delivered justice, even though they had by the confines of that trial. After hearing the outcries of victims and families in the courtroom, they internalized all of that. It was very difficult for them to be able to find somebody to talk to and to work through that pain.
So it comes in different forms.