Referring to the British Columbia case, which I understand you'll probably want to talk about once you have the report, this individual had not had any criminal convictions, wasn't on probation, wasn't on parole. From that point of view, there were no indicators that the person would go on to commit this serious crime.
From the point of view of whether we will face the challenge at some point of dealing with somebody who has committed a murder and would know that ahead of time and still be forced to perhaps take them into the program, certainly we will, and again, we have to try to weigh the risks and mitigate the risk to the communities. That, I think, is what the act speaks to. I'm not sure what the magic solution to that would be.
Concerning psychological testing, just to be clear—I don't want to mislead the committee—it's not to determine whether the person is going to go on to commit further criminal offences. We use it, and it's not mandatory, but we offer it to all protectees. We do it from the point of view of helping him reintegrate into society.
Do we have a set method of maintaining some sort of surveillance or tracking of these people on a continuous basis while they're in the community? We don't. To do that, I would think, would require a continual refreshing of resources in that area. As the act stands now, that is one gap in the act: that although all law enforcement agencies in the country have access to bring people in, when we deal with outside agencies, it's on a cost recovery basis.
If you are the chief of a small police force, but you have a witness who requires protection, this may really make it a difficult choice. They may decide to take some measures on their own: to move the person, not to obtain a secure name, and not to bring them in under the witness protection program.
That's one reason why I was saying that if there were a funded, integrated, national program, then all police agencies in the country would be treated equally, because we don't know where these protectees are going to come from.
But you make an excellent point.