 We are hosting the Federal Bureau of Investigation's large vehicle bomb post-blast analysis course. It is a joint venture between us, the DOD, the United States Marine Corps, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. If this was a real event, the people here today training would be the actual individuals responding to that potential type of event. Today, the students in the class are coming out and they're processing the crime scenes, collecting valuable evidence, identifying IED components, trying to determine what the charge was, approaching how big the charge was, and what the vehicles involved were. Camp Pendleton offers a great venue for the Southern California area. You need to have remote areas to conduct such operations because they are inherently dangerous. The normal explosive ranges that we have available to us are far too small, and we're usually limited to one-pound shots. On military bases, we've gone everywhere from a couple hundred pounds all the way up to 10,000 pounds. Southern California is very highly populated. Therefore, it has a robust first responder infrastructure. Whether that be San Diego County, LA County, Riverside, Orange County, we actually have representatives from all those counties. The majority of Southern California here today on site here conducting training. We branch out outside of the DOD and work with our civilian counterparts. When we're able to do that type of training, build those types of relationships, teach them what we know, and they can teach a little bit of what they know. The relationships build from there. You understand you have professional working relationships. Once you have that, and once you start to build trust with your other agencies, when it does come time for you to actually work together, it's that much more seamless.