I stand to be defined as not having all of the information around this, but when a case becomes routine—it may shock people to hear that a murder case can become routine—we will have preliminary results, someone in custody, and a court date perhaps 200 days down the road, much like the Pickton case. Once you have someone in custody there is a lot of analysis of a very serious case, and it that might take a year. People might be shocked to hear that this is a very important case and it could take a year.
We re-prioritize these cases so we can keep the ones up front that need immediate assistance because there are people still on the streets. It's a very complicated priority system. Some of the cases that may not seem as urgent become urgent because, despite their categorization by crime, the real differentiation may be whether the person is at large or not. That is a huge part of our prioritization process.