Mr. Christopherson, one of these comments was or is attributed to me. Clearly, murder cases, cases with violence, violent assaults, those kinds of things would definitely go right into the priority queue and be handled right away. That is my statement.
When I appeared before this committee—I appeared once before on the FLS issue—there was a request about the explanation for the negotiation process. When cases come into the lab, they either go into the urgent queue or they go into what we call the routine queue. We have murder and violent-type cases in both of those areas.
The question put to me was who decides on that negotiation process, who makes the decision? My response was that it's the case manager at our case receipt unit and the investigating agency. Together, they agree on what the response time is.
An example of that is that there may be a case coming up in court, and 100 days might be too long but it may be required in 60 days, so we program it accordingly. In those particular instances, that case will go to the front of the queue in the routine category. So that's the way that happens.
Now, the Auditor General has pointed out that a small number of cases are handled in this fashion. We were surprised by that. The whole process under discussion for turnaround time has to be initiated by the investigator, but we found out that not a lot of investigators were aware of that. We're fixing that right now. In the year 2005-06, there were over 350 cases submitted in the routine category that were given additional priority within that area.
The other comments...I did not make them, but if you would like me to comment on any one of them I'd be more than happy to.