That's exactly the way I was looking at it, because I'm thinking that the victims want to be able to see that yes, there's been an injustice to the person they love or to them. But they want to see that maybe this person has changed, or that maybe hearing that person's side of the story would allow them to move on.
I want to go back to the 96% success rate, if you will. I look back to what happened in the U.S. years ago with the “three strikes and you're out” policy. I know that it had to do with sentencing, but all it did was fill up prisons. There really wasn't very much rehabilitation. It was all retribution. What would something like this law do to the 96% success rate with pardons now?
I'll leave that one open. Mr. Fraser, I see that you're kind of grinning there. Mr. Hutton, I know that you probably have some opinions on this as well.