I'm not saying you made that number up. What I'm saying is that because some people have breached, you don't assume that everybody else has to have the same conditions.
Let me just say one thing. I don't know—I'm not an expert—about pedophiles. I just suggested that. I do know that GPS devices are being used with Alzheimer's patients because they wander. It's a way for staff to know that they've left the place they're supposed to be at, and they're useful in that context. So excuse me; it does work in some contexts.
With respect to people who are not without status in Canada, there are sureties. The same as for bail in criminal trials, you have friends and family put up money so that you won't disappear and cause them to lose that money.
There's voice reporting—and please don't distort what I said.... I did not say no voice reporting; I said that it doesn't have to be imposed on everybody just because you have it. You have to tailor whatever conditions there are to the individual person, and the best way to do that is in front of an immigration division member who will assess the need. Voice reporting may very well be an important tool, and it's certainly being used.
You can attach people to the bail program, in which they do active supervision and see them regularly. There are many mechanisms in place.
And GPS is not a mantra to protect Canada from everybody. It's not the kind of thing you have to put on everybody; you have to look at it on a case-by-case basis. I don't like it, because I've seen what it has done to my clients.