One point of clarification. I believe you indicated that there were 100 unlicensed factories. Our information indicates that it fluctuates constantly, and these could be small operations that could be mobile. But our indication and estimates are that there's about 50 in Canada. There is also the presence of manufacturing facilities in the United States, and that is smuggled from the United States into Canada across the border.
With respect to a double standard, I would not say there is a double standard. The RCMP enforcement priority is to target the highest levels in the organized crime groups. As I have mentioned already, there are 175 organized crime groups that are orchestrating and creating these networks. When it comes to targeting and enforcement operations, we put our effort where we think we are going to get the biggest bang for the buck and where we are going to have the greatest impact, and that is focusing on the larger groups that are overseeing the operations. It takes as much effort sometimes to target small operations as it does for a large organized crime operation. You require the same burden of proof, the same reasonable and probable grounds to execute search warrants, the same paperwork and process. So where we view our greatest bang for the buck is to target the criminal organizations that are orchestrating this.
When it comes to the manufacturers themselves, again it is the organized crime groups that we target and not necessarily the specific facility. The goal is to disrupt the criminal network; that will have an impact on the manufacturing operations as well.