Okay. That's fair enough. If there is no information collected about a firearm or if there is actually no assurance that in the issuance of a reference number a transaction actually occurred, how does that provide public value or a public safety value from a trace perspective when a firearm is found at a crime scene? How are you going to trace it? That's been the argument all along.
If at a crime scene you find a firearm with a serial number, and that's all you have, and you're telling me—and telling Canadians through me—that there is no firearm information actually transacted. You're telling me and Canadians that there is no closed loop that a transaction of a firearm actually occurred, yet somehow this is going to provide traceability that will add value to public safety. Can you please explain that to me?