That's exactly the question we're trying to address. There are a couple of important points about that.
In the ideal world, that's what would happen. People have experienced sudden in-custody death following restraint on a cardiac monitor with an advanced cardiac life support crew in attendance. Their rhythm was not ventricular fibrillation in the very few cases that have happened while on a monitor.
Why can't you get them on a monitor? It's because you can't get near them.
One of the great misconceptions that's been mentioned in this committee is that these people need medical care, and that could not be more true. The problem is how to get a 280-pound methamphetamine-intoxicated, violent, destructive, combative person into the back of an ambulance and into an emergency room, or, as happened in Black Diamond hospital just last week, what do you do when that person is throwing your oxygen cylinders through your glass, attacking your physician, and you have unarmed security?