I have two quick ones, if I might.
One thing is statistics. The other is a narrative, if you will, that goes with the statistics about what kind of training the person has, what the outcome was, where it was on the body, etc. There is a variety of narrative that goes with that that would give you that kind of information. Do you have an expectation that there would be some standard way that people would collect that information, other than just on the number of times it's been deployed?
Secondly, would you expect a standard medical response to the client who has been tasered to come out of this? There's been great discussion about positioning. I know there's still discussion about whether prone positioning is going to create difficulties for people; some people still think it is. I did hear you say after a tasering...be seated in a chair.
And the other part of that is around cardiac arrhythmia. A certain percentage of the population has cardiac arrhythmia at any given time--8% or 9%, something like that. So I am interested in whether there will be a standardized medical protocol as well for what is done at the time. I know some people call EMS before they use the taser. Some might put a cardiac monitor on right away, because if you don't, you're not going to know if somebody is in cardiac arrhythmia.
Would you anticipate that coming out of this as well?