No, absolutely not.
The practical reason, Mr. Chair, is that you're not supposed to get on one of the four relevant CPIC databases, the identification data bank, without fingerprint records to support that. What section 196.27 in the act already says—the law says this now—is that if fingerprints are taken and you're tried by summary trial, they have to be destroyed without delay. There's no practical mechanism in the law that stands now that a summary trial conviction should get you an entry on CPIC.
I'm not saying that it would never ever happen, because mistakes happen, but what the law provides right now is that it should not happen.
I hope that's of assistance, Mr. Chair.