transactions and recreate exactly what happens. the same thing applies with the dea s database. there are literally hundreds of millions of transactions. there is no feasible way for the dea to monitor and clear them as they go through. but what they are able to do is go backwards in time. what we ve done in this litigation, is we have been able to get access to the entire database, go back in time, and identify which communities were flooded. tucker: well, we know a lot of those were in ohio and west virginia, as you said. if you are a drug company and you are sending millions and millions and millions of opioid tablets to a single small county in westridge and west virginiae to know what s going on, don t you? this wasn t an isolated event. this happens all over the country. like, for instance, i looked up,