Okay. I'd like to switch to another part of your testimony.
You spoke about the police response to reports of missing persons. We've heard that the aboriginal police forces and the provincial, territorial, and RCMP forces have improved their operations and their procedures with respect to missing persons. The RCMP now have a national missing persons bureau and a national missing persons database that is accessible by all police officers; so they seem to have been taking steps, in recent years at least, to address some of these issues.
What struck me with regard to the victims' families we spoke with or listened to in the last session was that many of them expressed that they had not received much information from the police and from the justice system, including during the investigation right up to the time of a charge being laid, in cases where there were charges laid, and through the prosecution process. There was a frustration that they were somehow kept out of and not allowed to participate both in the investigation process and in the prosecution process.
Did you hear any of those kinds of comments from the people you spoke to in British Columbia?