Well, I wouldn't say it's a tension within our department. I think it's a question of a mandate that we have, which is different from a law enforcement agency's. For example, the statistics we gather or the information we gather is just that someone has been arrested and/or detained. We don't necessarily note down what the charge is, because we're not necessarily interested in what the charge is.
One thing we are doing is going back through our databases to find out what information we do have on those who have been convicted, so we could more clearly identify cases that are or could be of interest from a public interest perspective, and those are ones we would share with the RCMP.