It's actually quite realistic. Again, going back to my earlier comment about the impact this phenomenon is having on the native communities, there's a willingness by these communities to collaborate and participate in some of our enforcement efforts.
I can't speak specifically to the day-to-day type of activities that we have with aboriginal police services, but I can confirm that we're actually very proud of the cooperation that we have and the relationship that we have established with many of the aboriginal law enforcement services. An example would be a partnership that we have with the Akwesasne Mohawk Police Service, which participates full-time in our joint investigative teams, which are comprised of Canadian and American enforcement partners, targeting serious crimes within their territory.
Now, understanding the sensitivities that the tobacco trade has in some of those communities--again, I go back to my earlier comment--we do not target the communities themselves; we target the criminal organizations that have, for a lack of a better term, infiltrated those communities, and in that scope the aboriginal police services are more than happy to collaborate.