If it's someone with addictions, absolutely. We see it many times over, and in many families—it would be the rare family in this country that doesn't have someone with addiction issues in its midst, whether or not the family acknowledges it. Certainly, whether it's NA, AA, or many of the other self-help programs, they're premised on the fact that people can and do change. We certainly do have lots of examples of those successes.
Trafficking is not necessarily people who do use drugs. Those who do use drugs are usually the ones caught, quite frankly, because they get caught up. The ones who don't use and traffic are often engaged in a business of sorts, and none of us wants to encourage that. Quite the opposite, whether it's for our own children, whether it's for prisoners, or for whomever. So we'd like to see that changed, obviously.
But when the stakes go up and the rewards become higher, in fact, some would say—and some research would show, as Dr. Diane Riley said 20 years ago to Corrections—you likely will drive up the business and create a greater problem for yourself.