Just starting in Manitoba, I think we've had many success stories here, going as far back as 2003. The creation of the task force and the missing persons project that we undertook in 2007, to identify all missing women where foul play was suspected and looking at all missing persons, I think was a huge step forward for us.
The relationship here is one where the homicide units within the WPS, the RCMP, the Brandon Police Service, and all the police agencies would need routinely to discuss cases of interest. This is certainly not done in isolation in Manitoba. I think the money that's going to be put into improving systems and altering systems like CPIC, where you have a broader ability to put case pictures and information on CPIC--which of course is the Canadian Police Information Centre and is used by all police agencies across the country--will be a great step forward in the child exploitation area and in the missing children area, where you're going to create a database. It will again provide all police agencies and all agencies across the country the step forward in order to take us from where we are today to a formalized system where we will be able to track this stuff.
In Manitoba, as I've said, we have Winnipeg Police Service members and their files sitting in the same room as RCMP members and their files, and actually doing analytical comparisons. We've identified 84 files to date that are getting very stringent looks. We will be progressing further and looking at more files. You know--