Yes. I can give you a lot of very recent examples of the victim's safety not being considered when it came to imposing conditions on individuals upon release.
Police officers are bound by that very bill. We try to have the most lenient conditions and err we in elements of restraint. We try not to impose too many unreasonable conditions on individuals. However, from my perspective, through the offices I've worked in, we say that for intimate partner violence in particular, we should impose the conditions that are going to provide the greatest safety. We've had situations in which judges have released male offenders to reside at the address where the victim resides, saying the police will remove the victim from the residence. We will absolutely not impose that.
We're lucky that we have a very good working relationship with the Crown attorneys in Newfoundland. However, the consultation is not there with judges in particular, nor is the training there to get—