Thank you. Gentlemen, thank you for your testimony. It's very helpful.
Let's go right away to Mr. Cornea and Mr. Becotte. It's clearly understandable when you explain that there was a break-in, and then you lose your stuff and you have to buy everything. The insurance costs are rising, and there are numerous impacts from a material standpoint, and then come the mental health issues, which are even more important.
I'm playing devil's advocate when I ask this question. As a government, if I put more teeth in my regulations, double the sentences, make the punishments harsher and all that, at the end of the day, Mr. Becotte, you describe the fact that those who are organized and used to this don't even care that they look at you or that you look at them. They keep on doing their crime. I don't think that a harsher punishment will stop them from doing their crimes because the vulnerability is such that when the time comes that they're in front of a judge—if they ever get caught—it's too late. The damage is done, and your concern then would be more about the prevention aspect than the reaction aspect.