That's the essence of why I've brought this bill forward. The national parole board is charged with that responsibility. They go through their process, including having people attend before the national parole board, and then the warden releases someone....
This is not meant to be punitive. They release someone that the national parole board has turned down and the victims then get no notification. They don't get the opportunity to appear before the warden and to have their opportunity to explain why they don't think someone should be released. That's the part they find very difficult from a victim's perspective. It's that they have then lost any opportunity to have their feelings known.