Thank you.
Dr. Gill, it was mentioned by earlier panels, on Tuesday as well as today, that the challenge for police is that they are often looking for that one incident that is chargeable, something that's clearly within the parameters of our Criminal Code. You said something in your remarks that I'd like you to elaborate on. I think there is a struggle around nailing down what exactly it is we're talking about and when something becomes coercive control. You mentioned that it can seem to be normal, but the cumulative effect is coercive control.
Can you give some examples of that? We know that in the family relationship all kinds of dynamics go into play. How is something that can be normal and maybe non-criminal in one context, but with that cumulative effect—this gets into the difficulty of charging someone under the Criminal Code—could be coercive control?