 Domestic violence has been trending up just like the population of Denver. And it's trending up because domestic violence impacts every race, gender, creed, sexual orientation that there is. It's a cycle that can impact generations. By breaking that cycle we think that we can help people and often that involves connecting people to resources, getting them the help that they need. My name is Detective Gardier, and this is Detective Lloyd with the Denver Police Domestic Violence Prevention Program. Our program, the Domestic Violence Prevention Program, is different in that it's outreach to people that are typically the offenders, the other side of the equation. We're doing a follow-up from a refused case in January. Our outreach to victims of domestic violence, all of that stays the same. We support that 100%. We are still there. We will still investigate and prosecute and hold people accountable for those crimes. However, if we can connect with people that have a propensity to commit domestic violence so they can get the help that they need long before it becomes physical, then we're disrupting that cycle. Our only goal is to help set you guys up for success so that if you need us you can call us, but to help prevent the need to call the police. Does that make sense? We have several incidences where we are confident that we have prevented high levels of violence from occurring by doing this outreach model before the violence actually occurs.