Minister, in this technological age, no copy is made of dockets as they are completed. Now, the single piece of paper that represents a victim's right to justice then becomes a second victim. Firstly, it might become a victim of shoddy filing, or shoddy police work, and never to be found again. Secondly, and more commonly, it becomes a secondary victim for the perpetrator. While it is unforgivable for a member of the SA Police Service to lose a docket, it is equally so that certain members are corrupt and will dispose of a docket in exchange for money. Have the members of the SAPS been trained to detect and report such corruption within their ranks, and if they have, why is it still happening?