To the last point, that the intimidators have won, our experience is that the intimidators wind up in prison. We have an 89% conviction rate in cases in which relocated witnesses testify.
In a study that was done some years ago, I think it was in the 1990s, we found that in federal cases where relocated witnesses had testified, the sentences were longer for the defendants than in like cases against like defendants. That was a byproduct, certainly not an intent of ours. It just happened.
As far as relocating people from their community to another community is concerned, and giving them the opportunity to commit crime again, we do several things. You can look at it, in one way, that we have provided them with what I think social workers would recommend. We've removed them from an area of people they've committed crimes with, and they are now with people who are not committing crimes. We've given them a new opportunity. We're supplying them with psychologists. We have a WITSEC inspector where they are, helping them get a job, taking them to the grocery store, getting into doctors and such, and getting their children enrolled in school. They are getting to see a lifetime of non-criminal behaviour.
Some of them have to make real adjustments, in that they're not used to going to work at 8:30 in the morning, and home at 5. They're used to going to work at 8:30 at night and home at 5 in the morning. It's quite different. They're used to not telling their wife where they've been, but now they're in a community where things have changed.
Having been removed from these other influences is a plus, I think, in addition to that psychological assistance. Again, I have to restate that you have up to 18% recidivism, so we're not going to be perfect at it.