Okay.
Now I want to move to a different area, and that's the “three strikes and you're out”. I think all Canadians want to find a way to prevent those who don't deserve a pardon from getting one, while still making sure that those who have legitimately rehabilitated themselves, and demonstrated that, to get one.
As we all know, last June all parties cooperated together and passed Bill C-23A, which does a number of things. It raised from five years to ten years the waiting period for people convicted of an indictable sexual offence against children, ten years for manslaughter, and ten years for a major physical injury. And it raised from three years to five years summary conviction sexual offences against children. But it also did something else important. It gave the National Parole Board for the first time the clear discretion to deny a pardon in any case—Mr. James, Karla Homolka, any case—where it would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
One of the concerns is that we fixed the problems that may have been in the National Parole Board before, but now we're talking about prohibiting anybody from getting a pardon at all who has more than three indictable offences. I believe Ms. Rosenfeldt––if I heard right—said “three serious indictable offences”. It's not “serious”; it's “three indictable offences”.
Where I want to go is, on Monday we heard three offenders testify. One of them had 24 indictable offences. That sounds really bad until you delve into the facts. We found out that he's now an executive; he works in the media. He sold steroids. He told me that after his wife died of cancer he was grieving, he had financial problems, and in one transaction of selling steroids he had multiple indictable convictions. I think he said seven. So this is a person who would be prohibited from getting a pardon under this legislation.
So I want to hear from the witnesses and find out about this. In your experience, have you met people who have successfully rehabilitated themselves who have more than three indictable offences, who you think have deserved a pardon and who have successfully rehabilitated themselves?