We have a number of Supreme Court of Canada decisions that have been released over the past decade talking about what we just talked about, which is the cardinal rule that release ought to be the norm and detention ought to be the exception.
That principle really derives from the structure of the code as it stands right now, as well as the charter, but if you look at the structure of the code, the principle of restraint is actually embedded within subsection 515(1) of the Criminal Code. It's the starting point. It basically says that the justice shall release the accused unless the prosecutor shows why the accused ought to be detained. That's the starting point.
Then, under subsection 515(2), we have the ladder principle, which the common law has discussed at length recently in the Antic decision, as well as the Zora decision—