I guess one might wonder how I do know all these tricks. I'm not thinking of tricks. I did practise law for 30 years and I saw a few tricks in my time. I've been inside many prisons as a visitor and in my capacity as a lawyer, and obviously you learn a lot of things.
But in terms of what we're doing here, we're talking about an offence that has many ways of being committed, particularly when we're talking about the possibility of many different kinds of custody, as I just pointed out. The degree of moral turpitude, which is a word that gets used in law—someone whose offence has a high degree of either moral turpitude, moral responsibility, or consequences, and consequences even though they may not be intended. Someone who is driving carelessly and doesn't have an accident attracts a sentence by law. Someone who's driving carelessly and kills someone attracts a much more serious penalty.