And also we have a situation where we have progressive discipline to officers that are continuing to do it regardless and that involves counseling, training, and then ultimately some type of punitary situation. I don’t have the numbers on that yet, but we are reducing them substantially. And I understand that any person that is unfairly stopped and embarrassed — and it’s embarrassing situation and you feel violated — I totally understand. I don’t totally understand it because it hasn’t happened to me, but I empathize with that person’s experience and we are working hard everyday to drive those numbers even further down. I don’t see either of my opponents ending Terry v. Ohio. And if you talk to the public defender, talk to Keir, if you talk to Michael Coard, who is one of the leading civil rights lawyers, both have told me that you are never going to end it. You are going to reduce the unconstitutional nature of it and the aggregate number of it. You are not ever going to stop it as a police tool.