- You know, we described our investigative mission as being upside down. In a normal criminal investigation, you go to a crime scene where a crime has been committed. And you interview victims and witnesses and so forth, and you get some gathered some physical evidence and you get some testimonial evidence from them. And you use that evidence to go try to narrow down who your subject is. And then you make an arrest and you bring that subject in and you talk to them and you gather more evidence and you put it all together and you decide if you have a case and then you take the case to the prosecutor. Well, in this case, we were given a large group of people and someone said, these are your, your possible subjects. They've done something bad, go figure it out. So now we're starting from, you know, the subjects. And we're trying to determine who among them was involved in that crime or that crime or that crime or that crime a few years ago in Yemen or that crime a few years ago in New York. You know, how do you do that? It's an upside down investigation. You're starting from the subject instead of from the from the crime scene and the evidence. And by the way the crime scenes have all taken place over years. The evidence is, you know, monumental the testimony is hard to believe. None of the people that are in your subject pool can tell you who they really are with any degree of certainty or your, or believability. None of them have ID cards or, or passports but solve this problem for us. Really, really difficult mission. And so I think as time went on our people very much so changed their views and said we gathered up a bunch of subjects. There's probably a bunch of them that have no business being here. There's a bunch here that we know we got something on and there's a bunch of here, we have no idea yet. How do we figure that out?