This can be weaponized. First off, I want to note that I recognize the comparison between the Amber alert system and what we're asking for with the red dress alert system. I'm going to be one of those people who doesn't believe that the Amber alert system is always the best system, because the police control who gets put forward in an Amber alert and who doesn't. The issue for us, when we're dealing with the red dress alert, is that when people's phones suddenly go off with these alert systems—and it doesn't have to just be Amber alerts—their eyeballs start rolling. They don't like the fact that they've had intrusiveness into their lives. We need to make sure that doesn't happen with the red dress alert.
The other thing is that women become vulnerable when we target them and when we're looking for them, especially if these women are hiding because they've had perpetrators abuse them. They may have gone into hiding, so we need to make sure that, if that is the case, those women—I keep saying "women", but I mean people who are vulnerable, who might be youth or 2SLGBTQ—if they are hiding, we haven't set them up to be aggressively pursued by people who have been causing them harm. There are many things within this thing that we'll have to be very careful about as it's being implemented to ensure that it really is about the safety and well-being of people.