Just Info Is…

There are so many quotes about information, to name a few: that it is liberating; that it enlightens; that it empowers; that it is power.

The Just Info Hotline is the premier project of the New York Law Collective. It is designed to bring often inaccessible information about the criminal legal system to people who most need it, as well as provide service referrals relating to the many collateral consequences that stem from interactions with the criminal legal system.

In this day and age, there is a lot of information, and misinformation, especially about the criminal legal system. The last thing anyone involved with the criminal legal system needs is inaccurate or incorrect information about it. Despite the fact that information is more accessible today than ever before, some forms of information still doesn’t make it into the hands of the people who most need it. Additionally, people often do not even know about such resources, where they can get the information they need, specifically about the criminal legal system.

There is a legal principle that “ignorance of the law excuses no one.” However, that ignorance may have costly consequences. As the founders of the Just Info Hotline knew from their prior work in courts, which was reinforced during their work supporting people arrested during Occupy Wall Street, “a lack of reliable legal information [read ‘ignorance of the law’] is predictive of lasting damage, and as mass incarceration ruins communities, information can make all the difference” in the world.

The founders of the Just Info Hotline also saw that there was a world of difference between the Occupy Wall Street protestors and people living in communities that are over policed. For the latter, reliable information about the criminal legal system is oftentimes critical. We are talking mostly about young men of color who are more likely to be stopped, frisked, questioned, arrested and detained by the police than their white counterparts. All of these things channel them from their neighborhoods into the prison pipeline, the prison industrial complex, which is like a maze, a place hard to find one’s way out, and even when one finds one’s way out — there are many collateral consequences that formerly incarcerated people face that reduce them to second class citizenship — the lasting damage is done.

It is hard to undo the damage of the criminal legal system; therefore, we need to get ahead of its most insidious features. We need to immediately respond to interactions with the criminal legal system, first seeking and obtaining the accurate information to respond to it wherever it rears its ugly head.

The Just Info Hotline — 1-85-JUST-INFØ — is the number anyone may call to get the information they need about the criminal legal system — we have answers.

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Being Bruce Jenner

Just the other day Olympian Bruce Jenner said he identifies as a woman. 

As a teenager interested in all things sports, the Summer of ’76 featured  the Olympics in Montreal, in which my namesake, William Bruce Jenner, even though he, as I, goes by his middle name, made claim to being “the greatest athlete in the world” after winning the gold medal in the decathlon. It was a great triumph for America, unseating our Cold War rivals, the former Soviet Union, who won this event, as well as basketball and the 100-meter race, in the 1972 Olympics, historically events Americans dominated.  It was also the country’s 200th birthday. (This is the stuff you can’t script.)

I was fast approaching 16, deeply involved in sports, and I bought my box of Wheaties, “the breakfast of champions,” which featured Bruce Jenner on the front. 

In coming out, people are praising Bruce Jenner. This act makes me think of another great, James Baldwin, who explains this in his short story, “Sonny’s Blues.”  Sonny is a jazz musician. He dabbles in drugs, lives a certain lifestyle. But in the final analysis, he just wants to be. Why can’t a person just be? Sonny asks. 

Bruce Jenner will always be this great Champion of my youth. Perhaps he will also go down in history as the greatest transgender person. 

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Being Bernard Kerik…after Prison

This morning, on 77 WABC Talk Radio, Rita Cosby — @RitaCosby — interviewed Bernard Kerik, former, corrupt Correction and Police Commissioner of Gotham who, after a bit in the darkness of prison, has come to see the light about our criminal justice, i.e., that it is a failure, that we rarely truly give people second chances, and that the collateral consequences of a criminal conviction last a lifetime.  Welcome to the Fraternity of a Former Felons, Bernie! — @BernardKerik

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Review of my book, Streets of Rage, by Isa Rock

Easy Waters’ Streets of Rage is a must read, especially for anyone who enjoys reading a good and well written coming-of-age tale. The majority of the story takes place in 1970’s Brooklyn, in the projects and surrounding area. It’s a gritty, yet realistic portrayal of life in the projects and on the mean streets of Brooklyn during that time. It follows the life of its main character, Cedric Carpenter, who tries to make sense of his life and the world that surrounds him. In trying to come to grips with his own identity as a black man trapped in this urban prison, he is introduced to the Five Percent Nation, which not only teaches him of his superiority over the white man, but that he is in fact god! Waters does an excellent job in his portrayal of the Five Percenters and their teachings, always keeping it factual, although at times he cleverly uses humor to make his point.

Waters tells his story with the right amount of intellect, cultural realism and sensitivity. If you ever read Man-child in the Promise Land, you will develop a great deal of respect for this coming-of-age story and for the unique writing style of Easy Waters. If you truly want to revel in a good story, read Streets of Rage. You will not be disappointed.

Isa Rock is an award-winning essayist. He has more than 20 years experience with the criminal justice system. A born and bred Brooklynite, he now calls home Newport News, VA.

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Some thoughts on my novel, “Streets of Rage”

Growing up in the early ’70s, the Black Power Movement, informed by Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam, and its offshoot the Five Percent Nation, informed the thinking of the best minds of my generation — including mine, if I may boldly state such — especially in major urban centers. In fact, it was this generation most affected by hyper-incarceration — young Black men trying to find a way in a world that both feared and admired them. The fear factor though dictated criminal justice policy and the solution was to lock them up for the best years of their lives. Oh, what am I saying? I just wanted to tell a story about people I knew growing up in the crazy world of the early ’70s after the Decisive Decade, the ’60s, and the assassinations of the boldest and the best minds of that generation, which created this awful, violent, chaotic void during my coming of age.

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From my novel “Streets of Rage”

PROLOGUE

The little black guy was in the living room, kneeling on the floor as if in prayer. Papers were on the floor before him. A Bible was before him, too. He was intent upon what he was doing.

“Peace, god!” the youth who had entered the room said, watching the little black guy on the floor.

“Peace!”

The little black guy handed the youth a black school notebook.  He opened the book and read the neat handwriting. After half an hour he put the book down, sweat forming on his brow, his lips moving nervously, and said:

“You serious?”

“Yeah,”” the little black guy said; “it’s just a sacrifice.”

“But why kill a white man?”

“’Cause that’s the only way a Black Man can become god!” the little black guy screamed.

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About my novel, “Streets of Rage,” soon to be released….

Streets of Rage is a coming of age story, but it is much more. It is a book about urban legends, about the mythology of the inner cities, right in the underbelly of New York City during a time when the City seemed to have lost its soul, when cities were dying all across America. In fact, two presidents, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, campaigned before a ruin on Charlotte Street in the South Bronx to underscore urban decay. In the midst of this decay, Cedric Carpenter, a teenager, looks to make sense of his life on the mean streets. He finds it in the teachings of the Five Percent Nation…. Streets of Rage is a book that William Faulkner would have written had he lived in the ‘hood during this period.

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“The Justice Imperative” — The Key to Criminal Justice Reform

The Justice Imperative: How Hyper-Incarceration Has Hijacked the American Dream, is a book about the criminal justice and corrections system in Connecticut, but it is also a book about the criminal justice and corrections systems in the country, by the Malta Justice Initiative (MJI) of Connecticut.

MJI is a sponsored work of the Order of Malta, one of the oldest institutions of Western and Christian civilization, dating back to around 1050. Prison ministry is the core mission of MJI.

MJI has produced a book with the “fervent hope that by educating the public about the serious issues confronting the criminal justice system, [that] hearts and minds will be changed, thereby enhancing the potential for more positive outcomes and needed reform.” Since I have a positive review of this book, I need to get certain things out of the way first, in the hope that by educating people about the stigmatizing language of the criminal justice system that this, too, will be looked at as an area of much needed reform.

Throughout the book, the authors use the jargon of the criminal justice system, jargon that is stigmatizing, jargon that defines people by their crimes or criminal justice status, as if they are no more – “convicts”; “minimal violence offender”; “ex-convicts”; “ex-cons”; former offenders;” “felons”; etc. People involved in the criminal justice system are not defined and thus not seen as people, people in prison or jail; people convicted of nonviolent crimes; people who had been imprisoned; people convicted of felonies. This is very important, the language we use to talk about people involved in the criminal justice system, for when we see them as “other,” it is that much easier to deal with them in harsh manners, in sentencing and in prison and jail. On the other hand, when we humanize the language, acknowledging their humanity, then we begin to see them as our mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, that is, people connected to us in various ways. Perhaps therein lies the imperative.

Each chapter in The Justice Imperative, with the exception of the first and the last three, begins with a vignette, a powerful story about people and their involvement in the criminal justice system, from a young woman who helped her husband, a drug dealer, pick up drugs and drug payments from Western Union, sentenced to life, who has served more than 20 years, to an 86-year-old man who has served 40 years for felonies committed in the 1970s that were serious but did not result in any deaths, being denied parole, despite being confined to a wheelchair, suffering from a neuromuscular disorder, asthma, high blood pressure and cancer, based on a “probability” that he would not live and remain at liberty without violating the law and that his release would “undermine respect for the law.” (The former is a Connecticut case, the latter a New York case.)

One of the strong points of the book is that it deals with many of the myths of the criminal justice and corrections system, counterbalancing them with the realities. Each chapter, after the vignette, poses key questions, key observations and the current state of affairs in Connecticut.

As stated earlier, although this is a book about Connecticut, it is also a book about the country. We now know the statistics by heart: the United States imprisons more people than any other nation in the world, about two million people, mostly because of the “war on drugs.” It also locks people up for longer periods of time than any other nation in the world; it locks more people up for life than any other nation in the world; it locks young people up for life without and with the possibility of parole than any other nation in the world. And the list goes on and on, ad nauseam.

The good news is that it looks like we are sick and tired of having the dubious distinction of being a prison state. Most states are moving towards and implementing meaningful criminal justice reforms.

As we move toward reforming our criminal justice system, we must be committed to reform even in the darkest and most trying moments. When we look at the criminal justice pendulum, we see that we go back and forth between periods of punitiveness and reform. In fact, when we are in a time of reform, we are almost always one heinous crime away from reverting back to a time of punitiveness. Connecticut experienced this in 2007, when Steven Hayes and Joshua Komisarjevsky, two formerly incarcerated people, invaded the Cheshire home of Dr. William Petit. They beat Dr. Petit and tied him up. They sexually assaulted the doctor’s wife and his 11-year-old daughter. They later burned the house down, killing the doctor’s wife and his two daughters. The doctor somehow escaped. New York experienced this in 1997, when Nicholas Eugene Pryor, a formerly incarcerated individual, killed Jenna Grieshaber, a 22-year-old nursing student. As a result of this crime, George Pataki, New York’s governor, who was looking to do away with parole, in part for the state to qualify and be eligible for criminal justice block grants from the federal government, got Jenna’s law passed, which created determinate sentencing for people convicted of violent crimes. And perhaps Massachusetts experienced the most famous case in recent history. In 1986, Willie Horton, an individual with an extensive criminal history, was released on a furlough. He did not return to the lock up and ended up in Oxon Hill, Maryland, where he twice raped a woman after pistol-whipping, knifing, and binding her fiancé. This crime influenced the 1988 presidential election, and the Democratic Presidential Candidate, Michael Dukakis, who was then governor in Massachusetts, was tarred and feathered, and of course the rest is history.

When we look at the above cases, we must remember that they were crimes by individuals, and pretty much the exception, and that our criminal justice system is supposed to punish people for their individual moral culpability. These cases though impact everyone in the criminal justice system, and a form of communal punishment is meted out when the pendulum reverts back to punitiveness that seemingly touches everyone. Indeed, shortly after such crimes are committed, the rate at which people are granted parole is dramatically reduced, regardless of their rehabilitation and readiness for release. Nonetheless, the reality is that more than 90 percent of people in prison will eventually be released. This includes people convicted of violent and nonviolent crimes. How they return to their communities will have a lot to do with opportunities for transformation inside institutions, and opportunities to reintegrate into society upon their release.

Finally, The Justice Imperative states that there is an “imperative to act,” and that Connecticut, which not long ago was a pioneer for criminal justice reform, “can again lead the way toward the creation of a fiscally-responsible, far more effective, compassionate system of criminal justice and correction.” In following this imperative to act, The Justice Imperative provides the keys. There are 30 recommendations grouped into five categories: Legislative Changes; Executive Policies and Practices; Department of Correction Initiatives; Alternatives to Incarceration; and Improvement in the Re-entry Process.

“Dare to be great! Act on the Justice Imperative!”

William Eric Waters aka Easy Waters
— “I am a change agent for a just society.”
Blog: http://www.ezwaters.wordpress.com
Follow on Twitter: @ezwwaters

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THERE ARE NO SECRETS IN THIS PLACE

Officer Kirsch, or Officer K, as he was called, had once told Norman that there were no secrets in the maximum security prison. That was putting the matter nicely, Norman had thought. There were rats in every crevice in the prison and seemingly nothing went unreported. “There are no secrets in this place,” Officer K had said proudly, with conviction.

Norman was working in the prison’s Sign Shop, which made the street signs and license plates for the State. He was in the basement packing defective signs when he stumbled upon the tunnel. It was behind an old furnace that had obviously been forgotten. This wasn’t surprising. The prison was old. It looked like a medieval castle. Not surprisingly, there were long forgotten tunnels under it. Few prisoners had access to the basement. The Sign Shop was one of the few areas in the prison where the basement was utilized and thus provided access to prisoners, although this access was minimized and generally supervised.

Office K was the Sign Shop’s supervisor. It was ironic that he had told Norman that there were no secrets, because the guard himself couldn’t hold water. He had told Norman his wife’s name, as well as his children’s. He had even shown Norman pictures of the family. The wife was pretty in an incestuous way. Officer K had shown Norman his vacation pictures, the wife and kids on the beach in bathing suits. The kids were cute little devils, took after their mother.

In a way, Norman felt responsible for the family, like he was the breadwinner, since his imprisonment provided Officer K with the wherewithal to provide for his family. Norman didn’t know how to interpret this shared intimacy with his keeper. At first he had thought that Officer K was maliciously showing him what he was missing, but the guard genuinely liked him and wanted to share this happy moment in his life with him for, after all, Norman was as close to a fellow employee as Officer K had. He often praised Norman as a good worker. Norman didn’t cause any problems. Officer K had a great deal of trust in him. Norman, however, betrayed this trust. Whenever he masturbated he conjured up images of Officer K’s wife in the bathing suit and called out her name.

It had taken Norman three years to gain Office K’s trust. It was a whole year before he had left Norman in the basement alone, and even then he would sporadically check. Only in the third year did Officer K cease checking on Norman altogether. Thus he began his journey into the tunnel. It was a veritable maze. It crisscrossed under the prison, leading to the cell blocks and other points of the prison. One path led to the front of the prison. Behind sturdy bars Norman had looked up at the parking lot. On that occasion a woman, her heels clacking against the pavement, had walked past. Norman lustily watched her shapely legs. He had wished he could see her face. He wondered if she was Officer K’s wife, since she worked at the prison too, as many of the guards’ wives and girlfriends did.

When Norman first discovered the tunnel he was like a kid exploring. The con in him though hoped that one of the paths would lead out of the prison. He had vowed to search every nook and cranny of the tunnel to see if there was a way out. Some days he got frustrated, going around in circles, but he had vowed not to leave one stone unturned. Every workday if he was able to go down to the basement, he was in the tunnel searching. One day his persistence paid off. He saw the proverbial light at the end of the tunnel. He followed it. He had to restrain himself from shouting “Eureka!” He wasn’t long for this world. He would leave as soon as possible. It would just be his luck that after more than one hundred years the guards would rediscover his entrance to the tunnel. Their aptitude for serendipity was amazing, and frightening. If they stumbled upon this tunnel it’d be after he had left. He would make his preparations and leave in a week.

That week passed agonizingly slowly. Norman was on edge. At night he couldn’t even masturbate to the image of Officer K’s wife in her bathing suit.

The day before Norman was going to leave there was a flood in the mess hall. Norman learned about the deluge and thought it was an omen. A guard had journeyed into the basement to check on the flooding. It wasn’t too bad. He wouldn’t even have to assign any prisoners to mop it up. It was awfully musty in the basement and he didn’t relish having to oversee the operation if he reported that work had to be done. He was off the following day. If any work needs to be done, he thought, my relief can do it. It was too God-awful smelly down there.

The guard had returned to the mess hall and reported that the flooding in the basement was minimal. No prisoners were assigned to mop up.

The day Norman was going to leave finally arrived. This was the first time in prison he had actually looked forward to going to work. It would be his last day. He would leave as soon as he could, get as great a start as he could before the authorities realized that he was missing.

In the basement Norman squeezed behind the furnace and entered the tunnel through the hitherto long forgotten entrance.
He ran toward the proverbial light. As he got closer the light became brighter. It was blinding. He put his arm in front of his eyes. He stumbled and fell. He kept falling. There seemed to be no end to his falling. He finally hit the ground after what seemed an eternity. His head was aching from the brilliance of the light. He picked himself up and looked around. The light was still blinding. And it was hot. God it was hot! And what was that sound? It sounded like a waterfall. What was that? He almost stopped breathing. He listened. Someone was approaching.

He heard the steady tread of feet. He looked around him for a place to hide, but there was no hiding place. He looked up. The first thing he saw emerging from the light was the shoes. They were black and polished to a spit shine, exactly like the fanatical go-by-the-book guards polished their shoes. From the shoes he looked up. Razor sharp creases in navy blue pants. A sky blue shirt. Shit, a guard! Where was he? He looked at the face. He had never seen this guard. He was an albino, with woolly hair.

“Where am I?” Norman muttered.

“Hell,” the albino said.

Had he said “hello?” “What did you say?”

“Hell,” he enunciated clearly.

“I’ve always thought of prison as hell,” Norman said out loud but though he had said such to himself.

“No, you’re actually in hell.”

“I can’t believe this!”

“You mean to tell me you’re a…fallen angel?”

“Far from that!”

“So you belong here! Rarely do we get someone who doesn’t belong here.”

“I just thought I’d escaped!” Norman thought he said to himself.

“You did.”

“From one hell to another?”

“If you want to look at it that way. Hell has been given a bad name by all of your poets. I like to think of it as paradise lost.”

“How did I get here?”

“You followed the yellow brick road!” He chuckles. “How in hell do you think you got here? Didn’t you know that prisons are built right over hell?”

“I must be dreaming.”

“Life is a dream. This is better than life itself! You’ll like it here. A lot of interesting people, especially the advocates.”

“Devil’s advocates?”

“No, lawyers. We hold mock trials down here.”

“So nothing’s changed?”

“On the contrary, a lot has changed. Down here the acquittal rate is well over ninety percent.”

“What?”

“Down here we are honest.”

“I never met an honest lawyer!”

“Well, there’s a first time for everything. Would you like me to show you around?”

“An orientation?”

“Call it whatever you like. You can wander around if you desire.”

“Really?”

“Be my guest.”

“Am I?”

“Are you what?”

“A guest?”

“No, you’re here for eternity.”

“So I traded in one life sentence for another?”

“This is nothing like where you’ve come from!”

“What’s the difference?”

“In this world there are no restraints. You can do whatever you want. That’s why I like to think of my abode as paradise lost.”

“I can do anything I want?”

“Without fear or reprisal. As long as you can live with yourself afterwards.

“Are you serious?”

“Follow me.”

Norman follows the albino dressed like a guard. Men in three-piece suits, the advocates, wave to the albino as he takes Norman on the grand tour of hell. In a corner a dirty child is gnawing on a rat. Norman averts his eyes.
“Come now,” the albino says, “hell isn’t for the squeamish.”

They walk for about a mile. For Norman the tour is surrealistic. He keeps thinking that it’s nothing but a dream. However, certain scenes are realistic and reminiscent of the streets. There are bands of youth roaming the streets of hell; there are homeless people; there are unspeakable crimes being played out right before his eyes. The albino stops. “Look!” He expansively extends his arms. “All this is yours!”

Norman looks. Beautiful women in bikinis are on what is unmistakably a beach. For years he had only seen bikini-clad women on beaches in beer commercials!

“You can have any one of them,” the albino continues.

“Are they prostitutes?”

“No, they’re ordinary women who’ve found their way to hell. Many women are fascinated with evil, with evil men. Pick the one you want, follow her and take her.”

“Rape her?”

“Take her, rape her. I don’t care what you call it. Here nothing is forbidden!”

“But I never raped a woman!”

“There’s a first time for everything!”

“But I never –”

“Oh shut up! You don’t have to do anything you don’t want to, but anything you want to do you can. By God! you’re the most squeamish person we’ve had down here in quite some time. Normally, when people find out the true nature of hell they are ecstatic. They celebrate this new freedom with excess. ‘Indulge excessively’ becomes their motto!” Looking at his watch. “Well, you can make up your mind on your own time. I have things to do!” He goose-steps away from Norman and into the bowels of hell.
Norman sat down on the sand and watched the women. He watched them for quite some time. Actually, he lost track of time. His mouth was watering and it wasn’t because he was watching a beer commercial. He had singled out a woman he would take or rape, whatever one preferred. He just knew that he had to have her. He was going to have her. She reminded him of someone. He couldn’t put his finger on whom. Maybe it was one of the women in the beer commercials. God, she was a pretty woman.

The pretty woman was leaving. Norman got up to follow. He couldn’t believe what he was going to do. He had always despised rapists. In his ignorance and arrogance he had believed that a real man could have any woman he wished if he was willing to take the time to woo her or whatever it took. Now, he was stalking a woman.

The woman turned slightly and he saw her in profile. That’s when it dawned on him who she reminded him of. Officer K’s wife. How could she be in hell? Was she attracted to evil men? Officer K, despite being a keeper, seemed to be a decent human being.
Before he knew what he was doing he called out her name. First softly, and then loudly.

“Katrina?”

She turned. There was no recognition in her eyes. Of course she didn’t know him. What did he expect? He approached her and she bolted. He chased her, his eyes on her fine long legs. She was fast as a filly. But he knew that she couldn’t outrun him. He would track her down. He was in very good shape. He kept a steady pace, slowly closing the gap between himself and his intended victim. It was just a matter of time before she fell from exhaustion. He wouldn’t pounce on her. He would enjoy her to the fullest. It had been a long time.

She finally collapsed after a number of miles. He stopped running and approached her. She was on her hands and knees gasping for air. He grabbed her by the hair and turned her face toward him.

“Please!” she gasped out, still trying to catch her breath.

Her helplessness was arousing him even more.

“Please don’t hurt me,” she managed to get out between breaths.

“What’s your name?”

“You called me by my name!”

“Are you married?”

“Yes.”

“Do you love your husband?”

“Of course.”

“Do you have any children?”

“Two.”

“Will he forgive you?”

“Please, you’re scaring me!” Her eyes pleaded with him.

“I won’t hurt you.”

She started to cry. He let go of her hair. He sat down next to her. Suddenly, she bolted again. He got a hand around her ankle and she fell. He fell on top of her.

Office K came upon Norman in the tunnel where he had fallen. He shook his head. He was disappointed. He radioed for assistance. Only then did he check on his prisoner. He was semiconscious, moaning something. Officer K leaned toward him. First it was a whisper. He wasn’t sure if he had heard correctly, but then Norman practically shouted it out.

Help finally arrived. The now unconscious Norman was taken to the hospital where he journeyed in and out of consciousness for a few weeks, replaying his descent to hell for the nurse and the guard that watched over him. During that time Office K came to the hospital often. He was waiting for Norman to regain consciousness. He wanted to tell him one thing.

After a little more than a month, Norman regained consciousness. The hospital was brightly lit. He put his arm up to shield his eyes. Peeking under his arm he saw a sky blue shirt. He looked up and saw the face he had dreaded to see.

“Good to have you back in this world,” Officer K said. “I just wanted to tell you one thing: there are no secrets in this place.” With that Officer K walked out the hospital.

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Spencer Waters Legal Associates, LLC

“A Full service Virtual Law Office at prices you can afford!”

http://www.spencerwaterslegalassociates.com

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