Thank you, Ms. LeRoy.
I have a question on that point. It's an anecdotal situation, but really it's a common occurrence, if you will, in police investigations.
You have an organized criminal group. Now, they're involved in a series of fundraising activities, such as armed robberies. They go into a bank or credit union or some other institution and decide they're going to use as much violence as necessary—within some limits, I guess—such as jumping up and down on the counter, waving guns around, forcing tellers to the floor with guns in their faces, screaming at them, and cleaning out the till, and out the door they go. This group continues this kind of activity; they keep on their reign of terror. They're all balaclavaed, so nobody knows who they are.
Now a lead comes in, and there's an effort to try to obtain as much information about this group as possible and to try to get people as close to them as possible. One of them is arrested on a minor charge, or an outstanding warrant—which is in and out—and an operator decides, we don't know who we have here, but there's some connection, so let's find out. So they assault him and obtain a sample of hair from him, and lo and behold, it matches the samples in the balaclava.
Does this section apply?