Category: Metro

  • 3 accused of plotting to kill teen to prevent her from testifying about alleged sexual assault

    TAMPA, Fla. (TCD) — Three men are being charged with federal crimes for allegedly plotting to kill and fatally shooting a teenager to prevent her from testifying against one of the suspects because she accused him of sexual assault.

    According to Hernando County Sheriff Al Nienhuis, on Feb. 6, the victim, who WFTS-TV identified as 17-year-old Isabella Scavelli, went to the sheriff’s office with a relative to report she had allegedly been sexually assaulted by 36-year-old Lenard White.

    On Feb. 7 at 11:30 p.m., Hernando County Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to a home on Hazel Avenue in Brooksville regarding a double shooting. When officials arrived, they found two victims with gunshot wounds. Medics transported them to a nearby hospital, where the teenage girl died from her wounds.

    Nienhuis said Scavelli and her relative opened the door and two men allegedly opened fire. Scavelli was reportedly shot four times and sustained a fatal gunshot wound to the lower back, which U.S. Attorney Roger Handberg said was caused by her trying to run to safety during the “barrage” of gunfire.

    White allegedly reached out to 22-year-old Sheldon Robinson and offered to pay him $10,000 to kill Scavelli so she would not testify against him. Robinson reportedly posted on social media and asked for help with a “clean up job.” He allegedly recruited 21-year-old Keshawn Woods and offered to pay him $5,000 as well as give him cocaine.

    The three suspects face both state and federal custody. Hernando County Jail records show White was booked Feb. 8 for sexual assault, then released three days later. On Feb. 15, he was taken back into custody on the same charge and for resisting an officer. Woods was arrested Feb. 9 for possession with intent to sell marijuana and other drug-related charges. He was released Feb. 24. Robinson was also arrested Feb. 9 for cocaine trafficking and possession of a weapon by a convicted felon.

    The three men, along with Robinson’s mother, now face federal charges. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, a grand jury indicted White, Woods, and Robinson on charges of conspiracy to commit murder for hire, murder for hire, discharge of a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence, and discharge of a firearm in furtherance of a violent crime.

    White and Robinson face additional charges of conspiracy to distribute controlled substances, tampering with a witness, and obstruction of justice. The three men are alleged to have “attempted to hinder the investigation by disposing of evidence, tampering with witnesses, obstructing justice, and making false statements to law enforcement.”

    Robinson’s mother, Janet Williams, was charged with three counts of making false statements to federal agents. She was released in October and was placed under house arrest. Williams could face a maximum of five years in prison for each of the three counts.

    The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Woods is now detained in federal custody, while the other two remain in the Hernando County Jail. They will appear in court Nov. 9.

    According to WFLA-TV, Scavelli was a junior at Hernando High School and involved in different organizations at the school. The school district reportedly said in a statement she was “described by her teachers as an energetic, kind, and joyful student.”

    The three men could face life in prison or the death penalty if they are convicted.

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  • Suspect allegedly killed elderly woman with walker because she believed she wanted her boyfriend

    BATON ROUGE, La. (TCD) — Police arrested a 37-year-old woman this week who allegedly beat an elderly victim to death during a dispute about the suspect’s boyfriend.

    The Baton Rouge Police Department alleges that on Thursday, Nov. 2, Denise Law killed 66-year-old Melinda Reed at 3532 Riverway Drive. Reed sustained severe injuries to her head and face and was transported to a local hospital, where police said she later died.

    According to an affidavit obtained by The Advocate, Law allegedly confronted Reed inside a house at around 2:40 p.m. because Law believed Reed wanted a relationship with her boyfriend. Their dispute continued outside, where Law allegedly hit Reed with a metal walker.

    A witness reportedly informed police that Reed fell to the ground, and Law continued striking her until bystanders intervened. According to The Advocate, Law also tossed Reed’s cellphone into a storm drain, which was later retrieved by firefighters.

    Police arrested Law and booked her into the East Baton Rouge Parish Prison on a charge of first-degree murder.

    The investigation is ongoing.

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  • 2 Vermont men arrested after man is fatally shot during alleged drug dispute

    PLAINFIELD, Vt. (TCD) — Two roommates were arrested after a man was reportedly shot and killed during a suspected drug dispute that ended with the victim’s body being dumped in the woods.

    On Friday, Oct. 27, at approximately 4:30 p.m., hunters in Washington County discovered a body and contacted Vermont State Police. Troopers arrived at the scene and determined the male victim died “under suspicious circumstances.” The medical examiner conducted an autopsy two days later and identified the victim as 42-year-old Jeffrey Caron, who died from a gunshot wound.

    Then, on Tuesday, Oct. 31, Vermont State Police troopers took 35-year-old Kyle Bressette into custody on suspicion of murder, and 51-year-old Chris Relation for accessory after the fact to second-degree murder.

    According to Vermont State Police, Bressette and Caron allegedly got into a “dispute involving drugs” on Oc. 24 or Oct. 25. Relation allegedly helped Bressette after the killing and did not contact police about it.

    Officials obtained warrants for their arrest and said Bressette refused to surrender for several hours. He had an additional warrant for his arrest on charges of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer, aggravated operation of a vehicle without owner’s consent, operating a vehicle with a suspended license, failure to use ignition interlock device, and petit larceny.

    According to the Barre Montpelier Times Argus, Caron’s body was reportedly burned, and surveillance footage from the area showed a fire around the time he was likely killed.

    Vermont State Police Detective Sgt. Isaac Merriam reportedly wrote in the affidavit that Relation and Caron allegedly wanted to rob Bressette for drugs. Relation and Bressette were roommates, but Relation allegedly did not want to live with him anymore. Bressette and Relation went back to their home while Caron hid with a pipe. Bressette and Caron got into an altercation, which resulted in Bressette allegedly shooting Caron in the chest.

    Following the shooting, Bressette allegedly took Caron’s body and disposed of it in the woods.

    Merriam said in the affidavit Bressette denied ever knowing Caron. Relation allegedly sent Caron a Facebook message asking where he was, but Merriam wrote in the affidavit Relation knew Caron had been killed.

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  • Cleveland man pleads guilty to torturing woman and stuffing her body in storage container

    CLEVELAND (TCD) — A 31-year-old man pleaded guilty to multiple charges for beating and assaulting a 60-year-old woman and putting her body inside a storage tote, which she managed to survive.

    WKYC-TV reports Dalontay Edmond-Geiger entered the plea Tuesday, Oct. 31, for charges of felonious assault, kidnapping, tampering with evidence, and having weapons under disability. He reportedly faces a maximum of 25 years in prison.

    According to the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office, in early May 2023, Edmond-Geiger picked up the victim and drove her to his home on West 97th Street and Henley Court. When they got to his residence, he “physically assaulted her, stabbed her in the arm, zip-tied her hands, and proceeded to torture her.”

    WOIO-TV reports the victim was described as being “stuffed and folded” in the storage container.

    Cleveland Police responded to the home May 2 to conduct a welfare check because there were reports of a woman “acting hysterical,” WKYC reports. The prosecutor’s office said that when officers arrived, they “located the victim in a small plastic container, moaning in pain, on the porch.” She was transported to a hospital with severe injuries.

    Police arrested Edmond-Geiger on the scene. In addition to the charges he pleaded guilty to, the Cuyahoga County prosecutor’s office also charged him with attempted murder.

    Cleveland County Prosecutor Michael O’Malley said following the indictment, “I have seen a lot of truly terrible cases over the years, and this one is one of the most horrific I’ve seen.”

    According to WOIO, the victim was in a coma for several days following her hospitalization and is now paralyzed because her spine and back were broken during the assault.

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  • 75-year-old former teacher sentenced for sexually assaulting teen boy at school

    TOMAH, Wis. (TCD) — A judge has sentenced a 75-year-old woman to a decade in prison after she was found guilty of 25 assault-related charges in July.

    The Monroe County district attorney’s office announced in a statement via the Tomah Police Department that Anne Nelson-Koch was sentenced to 10 years in prison with 15 years of supervised release for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old student at the school where she worked. According to the statement, Nelson-Koch faced up to 634 years in prison with 373 of those years incarcerated and 251 on supervised release.

    The district attorney’s office argued for 100 years in prison.

    Judge Richard Radcliffe said Nelson-Koch “used her position of power over the victim to meet her own needs, recognizing Nelson-Koch was an authority figure trusted by the victim.”

    According to the statement, Nelson-Koch assaulted the student during the 2016-2017 school year and forced the teen victim to “repeatedly engage in both oral and anal intercourse during school hours.”

    The assaults reportedly occurred in the basement of a local private school.

    Both Radcliffe and Assistant District Attorney Sarah Skiles lauded the victim for coming forward and reporting the abuse to law enforcement.

    Radcliffe called the victim a “leader of his family and community.” Following the conviction in July, Skiles described him as “an incredibly brave young man.”

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  • 'Significantly decomposed' homicide victim found in Texas is identified

    BEAUMONT, Texas (TCD) — Police have identified a homeless homicide victim whose remains were found in a wooded area last weekend.

    According to a news release from the Beaumont Police Department, on Sunday, Oct. 29, at approximately 6:46 p.m., officers responded to the area of Avenue C and Crockett Street to a report of a deceased person. Once there, officers found a “significantly decomposed” homicide victim.

    To help identify the victim, detectives unveiled descriptions and sketches of the victim’s tattoos. As a result, police identified the victim as 65-year-old Johnny Tomlinson.

    According to KFDM-TV, Tomlinson’s remains were discovered near a gas station and where he had been camping. Some of his belongings, including a bike and backpack, are reportedly missing.

    A friend of Tomlinson told KFDM that the victim had difficulty moving and faced physical challenges. Friends have reportedly said that Tomlinson was a gentle, courteous, and soft-spoken man.

    Detectives have asked anyone with information regarding Tomlinson’s whereabouts from Oct. 15 on to contact police.

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  • The Clinton-Qatar-Hamas Connection

    The Clintons, Qatar, and the Israel Massacre
    Taliban Creates Fake Nonprofits to Get Millions in U.S. Afghanistan Aid

    The Clintons, Qatar, and the Israel Massacre

    It’s not easy to understand the Middle East, but one facet can be found in following the money. One open-wallet nation, Qatar, has been chummy with both Hamas terrorists and U.S. politicians. Our chief investigative reporter Micah Morrison provides the details in our Investigative Bulletin about Qatar’s connections with a former U.S. president and a secretary of state.

    Shortly after the world began learning the details of the massacre of Israeli civilians on October 7, Hillary Clinton published a note of support on X for “everyone affected by the horrific attacks by Hamas” and expressed “strong support of our ally,” Israel. The former secretary of state had nothing to say about one of Hamas’s key allies, the energy-rich kingdom of Qatar, and not surprisingly: Qatar is not only an important friend of the U.S. in the region but also for many years was a generous patron of Bill and Hillary Clinton. As Judicial Watch President Tom Fittonnoted on X, Qatar funneled money to the Clintons when Mrs. Clinton was secretary of state and she “hid this until disclosures from Wikileaks and pressure from Judicial Watch forced her to admit to tens of millions of previously hidden foreign cash payments to ‘Clinton Inc.’”

    Slipping money into the hands of slippery politicians—a time-honored tradition in the Middle East and elsewhere—of course is not the same as providing significant ongoing state support for a murderous terrorist organization. But the Clinton experience does provide a snapshot of the Qatari influence operation and a warning about what Qatar may be up to elsewhere, including in the United States.

    The Qatar-Clinton money trail begins around 2008, when the Clinton Foundation—under pressure due to Mrs. Clinton’s imminent ascent to State Department leadership—published a list of donors. Among them: Qatar, listed as contributing between $1 million and $5 million. A Clinton Foundation spokesman later acknowledged that Qatar had been sending the Clintons money “since 2002.”

    Pressure mounted on the Clintons in 2014 with the publication of a Judicial Watch investigative report disclosing that Bill Clinton had earned upward of $48 million in speaking fees around the globe, including from Arab countries, while Mrs. Clinton served as secretary of state. “Former President Clinton trotted the globe collecting huge speaking fees while his wife presided over U.S. foreign policy,” Tom Fitton noted at the time.

    In 2016, a leaked Wikileaks email revealed that five years earlier, in 2011, the Clintons had received a $1 million gift from Qatar. That gift was never reported by the Clintons, a clear violation of the disclosure agreement the Clintons had signed with the State Department when Mrs. Clinton took the helm. Soon after the 2011 gift, a high-ranking Qatari official pressed the Clinton circle for “five minutes” with the former president.

    Judicial Watch Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuits also turned up more evidence of Clinton conflicts of interest, including the courting of Qatar. A Judicial Watch FOIA disclosure in late 2016 revealed a list sent by a Clinton Foundation senior adviser to a high-ranking aide to Secretary of State Clinton; the list noted more than 200 foreign leaders to be invited to the 2009 Clinton Global Initiative annual meeting, including the emir of Qatar, the Qatari prime minister, and the minister of foreign affairs.

    Qatar’s pursuit of influence in the United States is not limited to the Clintons and their allies. According toinvestigative reports, Qatar has given $1 billion to American universities since 2011. Qatar also is a major purveyor of anti-Semitism. Its media is filled with anti-Semitic and anti-Israel propaganda. And at the UN—not exactly a bastion of pro-Israel sentiment—a high-ranking Qatari official was recently denied a senior post on the grounds of anti-Semitism. That’s useful context when considering Qatar’s role supporting Hamas.

    Here at Judicial Watch, we’re watching Qatar closely. At home, with concern rising about anti-Semitism on U.S. campuses, we won a recent lawsuit forcing disclosure of information about Qatar’s funding of American universities. Abroad, with lessons learned from our Clinton investigations, we’re following the flow of Qatari money. We’ll keep you updated.

     

    Taliban Creates Fake Nonprofits to Get Millions in U.S. Afghanistan Aid

    It may shock you to know that millions of your tax dollars are being given to the Taliban in Afghanistan. Our Corruption Chronicles blog explains.

    In one of the most recent Afghanistan debacles, the Taliban has established fraudulent non-governmental organizations (NGO) to loot the hundreds of millions of dollars in humanitarian aid that the United States has sent Afghanistan since the 2021 military withdrawal. NGOs are typically nonprofits with humanitarian missions that supposedly work to improve public or social welfare. Approximately 1.5 million NGOs operate in the U.S., according to the State Department, and they advocate for a variety of issues that include the environment, healthcare, women’s rights, marginalized populations, youth empowerment and economic development. The U.S. government gives NGOs billions of your tax dollars every year through various agencies, including the departments of Health and Human Services, Homeland Security and State.

    In Afghanistan terrorists are not surprisingly stealing the humanitarian aid that keeps flowing to the central Asian Islamic nation by, among other things, utilizing fake NGOs. Specifically, the Taliban is benefiting from American education funding through the establishment of fraudulent NGOs to receive donor assistance, according to an audit published recently by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR). The Taliban is also infiltrating and extorting existing Afghan NGOs delivering educational assistance, the probe found. “For example, an NGO official told us the Taliban are targeting and extorting Afghans who receive monetary support from U.S.-funded education programs under the guise of taxation,” the report states. “In another example, NGO officials told SIGAR that the Taliban are coercing NGOs to hire Taliban supporters or purchase goods from Taliban-owned companies.”

    Prior to the Biden administration’s abrupt military withdrawal, the U.S. invested $1.3 billion on education-related programming in Afghanistan and reportedly it “contributed to significant improvements” in the Muslim nation’s education system. Since the terrorist group returned to power in August 2021, Uncle Sam has continued to fund Afghanistan’s education sector through six programs that cost $185.2 million even though the Taliban has issued decrees drastically limiting access to education for girls and women as well as restricting women’s ability to work and other basic freedoms. Nevertheless, the American taxpayer dollars keep flowing. In fiscal year 2023, which ended in September, the U.S. sent Taliban-ruled Afghanistan over $566 million in humanitarian assistance. Most of it was for emergency food but a chunk was classified as going to general humanitarian and health. More than $15 million went to a cause that is labeled “redacted” in the government records.

    It’s not like American government officials don’t know the Taliban is taking the money. A report issued earlier this year by the United States Institute of Peace, the federal institution founded by Congress to promote worldwide conflict resolution, concluded that foreign-funded assistance is unlikely to prove effective as leverage to shape the Taliban government’s behavior. “On the contrary, the Taliban are likely to increasingly regard foreign funded activities as just another potential revenue stream,” the U.S. Institute of Peace found. “Any form of humanitarian or development assistance is prone to manipulation by the Taliban. Aid/development delivery…exposes [foreign donors] to Taliban coercion with little leverage or recourse to resist.” Specific to education, SIGAR writes that the Taliban’s “repressive” policies, especially those targeting girls and women, have severely limited access to, and the quality of, education at all levels. Yet the American taxpayer dollars keep pouring into the terrorist group’s coffers.

    Laughably, the Islamic Emirate Afghanistan (IEA) denied in a Pakistani news report that the Taliban is stealing U.S. education funds, insisting that the IEA acts in the best interest of Afghanistan. “The claims made by SIGAR regarding Afghanistan are far from reality,” according to the IEA’s deputy spokesman quoted in the article. “The Islamic Emirate makes all decisions and manages affairs in Afghanistan based on its principles and the nation’s welfare.”

    Until next week,



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  • Pair sentenced for kidnapping Ark. teen in an attempt to extort money from her family

    CONWAY, Ark. (TCD) — A judge recently sentenced two individuals from Tennessee for kidnapping and threatening a 17-year-old girl in an attempt to extort money from her family in 2022.

    On Thursday, Nov. 2, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Arkansas announced that the Honorable Chief Judge Susan Hickey sentenced 40-year-old Samuel Bolling Jr. to life in prison and his co-defendant, 21-year-old Dayla Ferrer, to 15 years in prison.

    According to the Hot Springs Police Department, on Tuesday, April 19, 2022, shortly after 3:20 p.m., missing teen Trynytee Case was found at 4737 Central Ave. She sustained minor injuries and was transported to a local hospital.

    Police identified Bolling and Ferrer as the primary suspects, and at approximately 5:52, officers located them at 4810 Central Ave. They were arrested on charges of kidnapping, aggravated robbery, first-degree battery, and first-degree false imprisonment.

    Court documents from the attorney’s office reveal that on April 18, 2022, Ferrer approached the victim in downtown Hot Springs, Arkansas, and asked for her help. The girl reportedly got into Ferrer’s car, but then Bolling suddenly attacked and held her down.

    The attorney’s office said Bolling and Ferrer contacted the girl’s family and demanded $10,000 to let her go safely.

    WHBQ-TV reports that a co-worker tried to call Case, but no one answered, so she notified her mother, who also tried calling. After numerous tries, someone allegedly answered Case’s mother’s call and said, “Everything is fine.” A man reportedly answered the phone and threatened to cut the girl up if they didn’t offer up the money.

    Bolling and Ferrer kept the girl overnight before releasing her the next day.

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  • Wife to hang for murder, and abuse of mother-in-law; Yoga teacher’s trial for killing love rival – TCDPOD

    This Week on True Crime Daily The Podcast: A woman convicted of her husband’s brutal murder in front of their son faces the gallows after harassing her mother-in-law in the courtroom. Plus, a yoga instructor on trial for the shooting death of a romantic rival in a professional cyclist love triangle.

    Mike King joins host Ana Garcia.

    YouTube: Wife to hang for murder, and abuse of mother-in-law; Yoga teacher’s trial for killing love rival

    TRUE CRIME DAILY: THE PODCAST covers high-profile and under-the-radar cases every week. Subscribe to our YouTube page for podcasts, exclusive videos, and more, and don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.



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  • Can you be a good lawyer if you’re not a good person?

    Ethics takes centre stage at IBA conference in Paris


    Do you need to be a good person if you want to be a good lawyer? This question formed part of wider discussion around ethics at this week’s International Bar Association (IBA) conference.

    Delegates at the IBA, held near La Défense, Paris’s main business district, were encouraged to “stay idealistic” and “help make the world a better place”.

    Patricia Sendino, a lawyer who works for BNP Paribas, the French bank, summed up by saying: “You cannot be a good lawyer if you are not a good person.”

    If Sendino is right, this begs the question what does being an ethically ‘good’ lawyer mean in practice? Once the profession talked about doing some pro bono work or making sure that you kept your client on the legal path and didn’t turn a blind eye to dodgy dealings.

    There is now a debate on whether to take a stand over even who you are acting for.

    Earlier this year, a group of lawyers, including well-known names such as Jolyon Maugham KC, Professor Leslie Thomas KC and Paul Powlesland, declared in an open letter that they would “withhold [their] services” from fossil fuel companies and would not act in a prosecution of climate protestors. Launched in March, 182 lawyers have now signed the Declaration of Conscience organised through the group, Lawyers are Responsible.

    In the US, meanwhile, Law Students for Climate Accountability have put together a scorecard listing law firms that represent fossil fuel companies, with the aim of informing law grads “so that they can make career decisions that are in line with their personal stake in the habitability of our one and only Earth”.

    Though there is no exact data on this, it appears that some lawyers are exercising their “climate conscience” in choosing which firms to apply for and what work they will do once they get there.

    But should lawyers make these sorts of choices?

    The 2024 Legal Cheek Firms Most List

    For barristers, refusing to act for a particular goes against the longstanding cab rank rule. This rule, referred to by the Bar Council as “the bedrock obligation of an independent referral bar”, prevents barristers from cherry picking clients and ensures that everyone has access to justice.

    For the majority of solicitors doing civil work, there is no direct equivalent of the cab bank rule. Whether or not an associate or partner should refuse to work for a particular law firm or, in their job, refuse to work for a particular client, is broadly a matter for individual lawyers and their firms. There are rumours that a few law firms are allowing associates to opt out of working with fossil fuel companies or specific polluters, but this is not published policy.

    Passions run high on both sides of the debate about whether lawyers should choose. Lawyers are Responsible say in their declaration: “we express our grave concern that lawyers who support transactions the effects of which are inconsistent with the 1.5c limit contribute towards the consequences [of climate change].”

    Strong words indeed.

    The counterpoint is that this is mixing up client and lawyer. Brian Archer, president of the Law Society of Northern Ireland, argued at another conference session, that if a lawyer chooses which clients to represent, they are, in effect, playing judge and jury. “I don’t think lawyers should be defined by their clients; that’s a matter for the courts,” he said.

    It could also be dangerous — like actors being associated with the parts they play and accosted by members of the public. Archer explained that in Northern Ireland, historically, where lawyers were identified with who they represented: “They could be murdered for that,” he said. “This is serious.”

    And some might say that if companies are going to tackle climate change, businesses need advice from good lawyers to make that happen; lawyers working for and within fossil fuel companies could make positive change.

    Thus far, the Bar Standards Board confirmed to Legal Cheek that it hasn’t yet had any complaints or referrals where a barrister has refused to act due to the identity of the client. But it may only be a matter of time.

    For solicitors, Nick Emmerson, the new president of the Law Society (which published guidance on the topic in April), speaking at the conference, argued that law firms should accommodate an expression of “climate conscience”. “There is scope for law firms to enable lawyers to not work for a particular client or matter,” Emmerson explained. “It’s the same issue that came up with tobacco companies previously.”

    Perhaps what is needed is greater engagement between firms and their lawyers about what are their shared values, and, equally importantly, how to afford those values when faced with the commercial realities of running a firm. Speaking to Legal Cheek, one managing partner of a law firm in Nigeria, Babatunde Ajibade, said: “A law firm is a collective body making decisions as a group. If that collective has decided to take on a client, then l would hope that the lawyers working at the firm would stand by that.”

    The IBA’s annual conference concludes today (3 November).

    The post Can you be a good lawyer if you’re not a good person? appeared first on Legal Cheek.

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