I think there's a vulnerability in taking that approach. It would almost be like trying to gather up after a dandelion has gone to seed and has blown across our country. You'd be picking up the fragments of the aftermath, rather than rooting out these networks of trafficking and disrupting those organized crime elements.
If you look at the facts, the sheer statistical reality is that it's somewhere between 600 to 800, and we know the statistics aren't easy to come by. If there is that level of individuals trafficked into Canada, contrasted with some 700,000 trafficked internationally around the world, you're really not even scratching the surface.