 Today we're running a public reassurance operation in the Buranda area, near the PA Hospital and the Buranda Shopping Centre. We do a number of different tasks, some of them are traffic related. We have people who are looking for offences in the traffic that's moving around the area. We have police that are doing speed checking on some of the local streets. We have a group of police who are doing foot patrols with what we call a locket and loser campaign. What we do there, the police literally go and check parked cars that are parked in streets and car parks. They check the vehicle to make sure it's secure, but more importantly also they check to see if there are any visible items that could be stolen. We've just walked past five cars here now, and out of those five, three cars have something wrong. The first car has a shopping bag with clearly it's got property in it. The second car has got a credit card sitting in the centre console. And the third car has their NAB man bracket sitting on the windscreen, which basically means if you break into my car, the NAB man is probably in the glove box or sitting under the seat. This is really important for us. We find over time that criminals are attracted to an area if it's easy to commit crimes. And if they can simply break into a car and steal someone's laptop or mobile phone, jewellery, cash, golf clubs, they'll do that. And we're in a battle with the community to make them aware that doing that actually affects everybody's quality of life. Everything we hear and that is said in the media, the community want to see police with their feet on the ground. We want to do that too, and we can't always do that, but when we do it, we do it really well. This is about assuring the public that we are there, we do support them, and we find it to be a very, very effective way of policing this area.