Thank you for that question.
In fact, it was probably one of the most important factors that pushed us to move quickly. There was a great deal of misinformation on social media in particular—we all saw bits of it without seeing all of it—that all of a sudden, if you were intoxicated, this was a “get out of jail free” card. This was a pass.
It was an explosion of misinformation. We needed to correct it quickly. Even though this was only a rare case and even though that wasn't true, it didn't matter; people felt it was.
By closing this admittedly small gap, we could reinforce the larger message, which is that if you get drunk, you will be held responsible. That's a critically important message that people needed to hear.
I wish we didn't have to do that, quite frankly. I wish that there wasn't that level of misinformation out there. Whether it's erroneous or deliberate is inconsequential; it is there, so we needed and still need to fight that message constantly. We all have a responsibility to do that.
Closing this gap helped us to do that; closing it quickly helped us to reinforce that even more.