First, I have to make a correction from the introduction, because I conferred with someone yesterday who is doing the work I used to do. I'm retired. I don't want him getting angry thinking I'm reclaiming his job.
I talked to him about that issue, as a matter of fact, to see that the procedures were still the same, and they are. We have a great deal of flexibility in our program resident in the Office of Enforcement Operations to make determinations such as whether we should disclose or not disclose, when it is appropriate, what the rules would be, and so on.
When a person commits a crime in the United States who's been in the program--the person has a new name and commits a crime--it generally becomes public because they're going to trial. Our trials are very public. He is prosecuted under his new name. Frequently his old name might be mentioned in the course of the indictment. It might be Joe New Name and Joe Old Name, so that the prosecutor feels he has it absolutely right.