Yes. The overwhelming number of firearms used in criminal behaviour come from the United States. That's anywhere from 80% to 90%, and it varies by jurisdiction. For instance, there are some smaller cities in Canada where they would have more domestically sourced guns, but they're seizing fewer guns overall so even just a little bump in domestically sourced guns reflect as a higher percentage.
Typically 80% to 90% come from the United States. The remainder of those—virtually all of those that would be domestically sourced—are stolen guns, which is property crime. When it comes to handguns, they're very securely stored, as we know. The law makes us do that. Then, a very small percentage—in fact, we found out what the percentage is, because it's not available data in Canada—around 0.007% of gun owners engage in straw purchasing. We think there were somewhere around 50 instances of that over the last 24 years. It's a very minuscule amount of that. There are some stolen guns, and then the overwhelming majority are from the United States.