Thank you very much for coming this morning, gentlemen. I think it's a learning curve for us all.
I'd like to pick up on the questioning with regard to the certainty of a DNA sample that equates to a person. It sort of leads me into two areas that the three centres would deal with.
The first is fingerprints. We relied heavily on fingerprints in the past. I wonder if you would be able to relate the certainty of a fingerprint, once it matches, once you have the requisite indices, which are 11 or 12, I believe, to the DNA and the indices that indicate that this DNA belongs to that individual--the more indices, the more the accuracy. I would equate that to fingerprints. I would like you to talk about that and then about the scientific theory that either one could belong to a person other than the person who gave either that fingerprint or that DNA sample. For the folks out there, some would say that it is possible that you could get a good sample and it would be analyzed, and it might not belong to that person. However, I think the world of science says that it's extremely highly unlikely.
I wonder if you could equate the fingerprint to DNA and make that analysis, because we now accept fingerprints completely, because the science has been proven. But DNA is new in its evidentiary submission to courts, and we sometimes doubt anything new.
Either of the two gentlemen from the centres or Ms. Séguin can answer.