It depends—and we don't have this—upon how those members of the commission make decisions. There's no indication that, for instance, the entire panel has to make the decision. Most of these commissions around the world break it into smaller panels of two or three people, and they decide. It may be a majority decision. It may require a unanimous decision of those two or three people as to whether a case goes forward.
These people are imbued with the ability to correct miscarriages of justice, and that's a very noble cause, so I'm not particularly worried that those people on the commission, whether they're lawyers or non-lawyers, wouldn't be doing absolutely everything in their power to do what's best for the people who come before them.