Well, there's a difference between us and judges, and I say this as a former prosecutor. The rules are very tight if you want to do a criminal prosecution. There are rules of evidence, there's admissibility, and there's proof beyond a reasonable doubt. If our focus is remedial, we get to hear an awful lot more and see an awful lot more that would not necessarily be legally admissible but would be relevant. So you don't apply the same standard.
In terms of recommendations, with our key decisions, we're taking them now and depersonalizing them in the sense of removing the names of officers and witnesses, and we're putting that up on our website. So if people can get out there and look at it, that's how we think we have to bring pressure, through transparency.