Okay.
I'm not a lawyer on this question, but it's similar to people developing class action concerns against the government. I'm taking the concerns of the veterans who came back from World Wars I and II and Korea and who were mentally or physically challenged. For whatever reason, the government of the day said they couldn't handle their finances, or something, and that money was put in trust for them. This money has developed into billions of dollars in interest, apparently, and I guess there's litigation now happening on that.
Would you ever foresee an ombudsman being able to get involved in this, prior to it going to the courts? Once it goes to the courts, the ombudsman, obviously--I assume legally--has to be out of the question and let the courts follow the natural path of legality. Would an ombudsman, in this particular case, be able to investigate something of that broad a nature? That is long. It's expensive. Could you foresee doing something of that grand a scale, or should the ombudsman do something more compact in terms of policy arguments?