One of the results we've seen is that, sometimes, the limited resources we have and the limited resources law enforcement have are wasted when they're applied in a universal kind of manner, rather than picking out those who are at most risk of reoffending.
I also want to say the second aspect of this bill is also urgent. Certainly, in the study on victims in this committee, we heard from the victims of sexual assault about what, I think, people haven't really thought about, which is people who were prosecuted for talking about their own sexual assault cases.
Sometimes, this is a question of agency for them. They feel there's nothing shameful for them in what happened, and they would like to be able to speak about it. Sometimes, some of those victims felt it was a matter of public safety and that other members of their family or community needed to know about the case. By “publication ban”, we think of putting it on TV or putting it in a newspaper, but the publication ban meant that they couldn't talk about it with other people.
I wonder if you're familiar with those prosecutions and restrictions on victims.