Two cases in this edition (covering cases decided August 4-18, 2003) are of national note. In
Tennessee
v. Robinson the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals has reversed on
the trial court's failure to charge certain lesser-included offenses. Remarkable in
this decision, however, is what the Court ordered next. In what the court appears to state is a
case of first impression for that Court, it barred the
prosecution from seeking the death penalty on remand due to intra-case
"proportionality
issues" discussed at length in the excerpts provided below from that decision.
Spears v.
Mullin is likewise remarkable for the grant of relief on what is often pleaded as a "throw away" garden
variety claim. Specifically, a Tenth Circuit panel vacated a death
sentence for the introduction into evidence of rather gruesome photographs depicting the decedent's
numerous post-mortem
stab wounds. This decision is noteworthy as the state had argued
at the penalty phase the aggravator of heinous, atrocious and cruel.
Elsewhere the Fifth Circuit in Guy v. Cockrell ordered a remand to examine a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on whether the legal team's investigator had a conflict of interest due to his involvement with the murder victim's mother and whether failed to "investigate thoroughly" Guy's mitigation evidence as a result of this alleged conflict. In Deere v. Woodford a remand has been ordered on the issue competency to stand trial & plead guilty. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, although it has yet to elucidate its rationale, granted a stay to Mark Robertson on a "Penry" issue concerning the ability to present evidence in mitigation.
In a less happy development reminiscent of the darker days of the death penalty's recent history, the Fourth Circuit en banc in Rouse v. Lee has denied all federal review to a capital habeas petitioner for filing his habeas petition exactly one (1) day late.Focus
this week covers excerpts (courtesy of the Death Penalty Information
Center) of Judge Wolf's rather lengthy opinion in United States v.
Sampson on the risk of error in capital cases.
Please note that
this week's edition was prepared using new software and the formatting
may appear "off" on some computer systems.
As always, thanks for reading and your continued work in the area of capital defense. - k
EXECUTION
INFORMATION
The following person's have
been executed since the last edition:
August
7 Tommy Fortenberry Alabama
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on Tuesday halted the
scheduled August 20th execution of Mark Robertson after his counsel, Randy
Schaffer, argued jurors should have been allowed to consider his
troubled childhood during sentencing. The execution of Ricky
Lynn Lewis, also in Texas, was stayed by a federal district court for unknown reasons
at this time. Both dates were considered serious. Congratulations to all counsel.
The following execution dates
are believed to be serious:
22 Quentin Jones North Carolina
SeptemberHOT LIST3 Paul Hill Florida (volunteer)
8 Perry Austin Texas
10 Larry Hayes Texas
12 Henry Hunt North Carolina
24 Philip Workman Tennessee
26 Joseph Bates North Carolina
Spears v. Mullin, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16586 (10th Cir 8/12/2003) "We agree with the district court that the introduction into evidence of the photographs depicting Thompson's numerous post-mortem stab wounds, large gash wounds, exposed intestines and swollen face and black eye rendered the second stage fundamentally unfair. Because the heinous, atrocious, or cruel aggravator focuses on Thompson's conscious suffering, and the evidence showed Thompson died or lost consciousness early on in the beating, the photographs of all of his injuries were unduly prejudicial at the second phase."
CAPITAL CASES
(Favorable
Disposition)
Guy v. Cockrell, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16632 (5th Cir 8/13/2003) Remand
ordered to examine a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on
whether as the "result of his legal team's investigator's alleged
conflict of interest arising from his relationship with French Howell,
the murder victim's mother. In other words . . . whether
failure to "investigate thoroughly" Guy's mitigation evidence resulted
from this alleged conflict."
Deere v. Woodford,
2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16543 (9th Cir 8/13/2003) Remand ordered on issue
competency to stand trial & plead guilty where after the defendant
plead guilty he demanded to be executed. Note: Expert at trial
falsified credentials.
Goodin v.
Mississippi, 2003 Miss. LEXIS 353 (Miss 8/7/2003) Leave granted "to
proceed in the trial court on the issue of whether he is mentally
retarded such that he may not be executed under Atkins v. Virginia."
CAPITAL CASES
(Unfavorable
Disposition)
Rouse v. Lee, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16417 (4th Cir 8/11/2003) (en
banc) (dissent) Petitioner barred from ever having his conviction and
death sentenced reviewed on federal habeas because the petition was
filed one day late. Barred from review was a possible winning claim of
a very malignant form of racism infecting the jury pool, with at least
one juror openly referring to all blacks as "niggers."
Graves v.
Cockrell, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16734 (5th Cir. 8/15/2003) COA granted
but relief denied on claim that "the state failed to disclose to Graves
that his co-defendant and key prosecution witness had informed the
district attorney that Graves was not involved in the charged crime on
the day before he testified to the contrary at Graves' trial."
McWilliams v.
Cockrell, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16761(5th Cir.
8/15/2003) (unpublished) COA & relief denied on "(1) the failure to
inform the jury that, if sentenced to life in prison, he would be
ineligible for parole for at least forty calendar years under Texas's
capital sentencing scheme violated his Sixth Amendment right to
effective assistance of counsel and Fourteenth Amendment rights to due
process and equal protection; (2) he was denied his Eighth Amendment
right to protection from cruel and unusual punishment; (3) the state
habeas court wrongfully denied him access to sealed juror cards in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment due process clause; and (4) his
appellate counsel provided ineffective assistance in violation of his
Sixth Amendment right to counsel."
Busby v. Cockrell,
2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16761 (5th Cir. 8/15/2003) (unpublished) COA &
relief denied on claims of "(1) whether the trial court's admission of
the prison letters violated his Fourteenth Amendment due process
rights; (2) whether the trial court's jury charge concerning the
voluntariness of Busby's confession violated his Fourteenth Amendment
due process rights; (3) whether the trial court's denial of Busby's
request for an expert jury consultant violated his Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendment rights to a fair trial; (4) whether the trial court's denial
of Busby's request for a drug abuse expert violated his Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendment rights to a fair trial; and (5) whether the trial
court's failure to instruct the jury concerning parole eligibility
violated Busby's Eight Amendment and Equal Protection rights."
Ex parte Manassa, 2003 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 177 (Ala. Crim. App.
8/8/2003) Mandamus denied on the issue of whether one can be guilty of
capital murder by means of "transferred intent."
In re
Barnett,
2003 Cal. LEXIS 5683 (CA 8/7/2003) "Consistent with
the
general rule that represented parties have no right to present their
cases
personally alongside counsel--a principle we have recognized in the
context
of both capital trials and appeals, and noncapital habeas corpus
proceedings
as well--this court will not file or consider a represented capital
inmate's
pro se submissions that challenge the legality of the inmate's death
judgment
or otherwise fall within the scope of counsel's representation.
Conversely,
we shall file and consider a represented capital inmate's pro se
submissions
that pertain to matters falling outside the scope of counsel's
representation.
We shall also file and consider pro se motions limited to matters
concerning
the inmate's representation."
Jackson v.
Mississippi, 2003 Miss. LEXIS 355 (Miss 8/7/2003) Relief
denied, most notably, on claims relating to entitlement to instruction
on manslaughter; jury's verdict relating to whether the murder was
intentional;
constitutionality of the felony child abuse/battery provision of
Mississippi's
death penalty scheme; denied his rights to an independent, conflict-
free,
reliable and competent mental health evaluation; compultion to
incriminate
himself by submitting to a mental health examination; whether appellate
counsel was ineffective; trial counsel's abandonment of an insanity
defense;
failure to investigate mitigation; and whether prosecutorial
arguments
and comments violated Jackson's rights and misinformed and misdirected
the jurors on the law.
Byram v.
Ozmint,
2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16059 (4th Cir 8/6/2003)
Relief
denied on claims of ineffective assistance of counsel for
defense
counsel's improperly selecting jurors in violation of governing case law and that counsel
did
not have a coherent strategy for developing all available mitigation
evidence
Bruce v.
Cockrell,
2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 15555 (5th Cir 8/4/2003)
Relief
denied on claims that trial counsel, at the punishment phase of
the
trial, rendered ineffective assistance by failing to present evidence
to
rebut the State's evidence on the issue of future dangerousness;
trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to investigate
and present evidence of parental abuse and neglect; claims relating
to Penry
II; and that the petitioner received ineffective assistance of state habeas
counsel.
Chase v.
Epps,
2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16182 (5th Cir 8/7/2003) Relief
denied most notably on whether "trial counsel was ineffective for
failing
to present evidence of his mental retardation at his suppression
hearing,
at trial, and at sentencing."
Nelson v. Cockrell, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16605 (5th Cir 8/12/2003) (unpublished)
Relief denied on: "(1) whether the special issue instructions used at
trial provided the jury with an adequate vehicle to give mitigating
effect to evidence in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments
as construed in Penry v. Lynaugh, 492 U.S. 302, 106 L. Ed. 2d 256, 109
S. Ct. 2934 (1989); (2) whether Nelson's counsel provided ineffective
assistance by failing to request an instruction on the definition of
reasonable doubt or by failing to raise this issue on direct appeal;
and (3) whether the introduction of testimony by a state psychiatrist
regarding future dangerousness violated the Fifth Amendment as
construed in Estelle v. Smith, 451 U.S. 454, 68 L. Ed. 2d 359, 101 S.
Ct. 1866 (1981)."
OTHER CASES OF
NOTE
Paine v. Massie, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 16500 (10th Cir 8/11/2003) Remand
ordered on trial counsel's failure to use an expert in "the field of
battered woman syndrome" to explain the defendant's killing of her
abusive husband.
United States v. Waggoner, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 15619 (9th Cir 8/5/2003)18 U.S.C. § 3005 does not "require that two attorneys be appointed whenever the government indicts a defendant for a crime punishable by death, even if the death penalty is not sought."
FOCUS
The focus section this week focuses on the
excerpts from Federal District Court Judge Mark Wolf's (MA) Opinion in United
States v. Sampson. The following excerpts are from
Judge Mark Wolf's opinion allowing the federal capital prosecution of
Gary Lee Sampson to proceed. In his decision, Judge Wolf of the Federal
District Court in Boston expressed reservations about the risks of
executing the innocent and appeared to criticize the Justice
Department's zealous approach to seeking capital convictions. The
headings for these excerpts, which are not part of the original text,
are followed by page numbers that correlate with the referenced section
of the full text. Read the
full text of the decision.
DUTY OF THE COURTS (page 6)
As
the Supreme Court has repeatedly reiterated, whether a penalty
constitutes cruel and unusual punishment is not determined by the
standards of the eighteenth century when the Eighth Amendment was
adopted. Rather, the Eighth Amendment must draw its meaning from
"'the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a
maturing society.'" Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 311-12 (2002)
(quoting Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. 86, 101 (1958) (plurality opinion)).
It is, therefore, the duty of the courts to reconsider periodically
whether the death penalty offends contemporary standards of decency.
See §IV, infra.
RISK OF EXECUTING THE INNOCENT (pages 8-10)
[Sampson] has, however, persuaded the court that this is a serious question, that future developments could strengthen this argument, and that courts will have a duty to monitor carefully future legislation and jury verdicts concerning the death penalty in deciding what is likely to be the constantly recurring question of whether the risk of executing innocent individuals renders the death penalty generally, or the FDPA particularly, unconstitutional. See §VII, infra.
More specifically, in 1993, a majority of the Justices of the Supreme Court stated that the execution of an innocent person would violate the Constitution. See Herrera v. Collins, 506 U.S. 390 (1993). This court agrees.
The risk of executing the innocent has long been recognized. However, in the past decade substantial evidence has emerged to demonstrate that innocent individuals are sentenced to death, and undoubtedly executed, much more often than previously understood. In that period, DNA testing has established the actual innocence of at least a dozen inmates who had been sentenced to death. These developments have prompted the reinvestigation of many other capital cases, resulting in the release of more than 100 innocent individuals from the nation's death rows.
In deciding in 2002 that it is no longer constitutional to execute the mentally retarded, the Supreme Court wrote that "we cannot ignore the fact that in recent years a disturbing number of inmates on death row have been exonerated." Atkins, 536 U.S. at 320 n.25. The government correctly asserts that the Supreme Court was addressing convictions obtained in state courts, rather than under the FDPA. The government contends that similar errors could not occur in federal courts.
The government's confidence that the FDPA will never lead to the execution of innocent individuals is not shared by the only federal judge to have conducted the trial of an FDPA case in Massachusetts. Judge Michael Ponsor presided in the trial of Kristen Gilbert, a nurse convicted of murdering four of her patients and attempting to murder three others. After the jury's 2001 verdict decided that she should be sentenced to life in prison, Judge Ponsor wrote that "[t]he experience left me with one unavoidable conclusion: that a legal regime relying on the death penalty will inevitably execute innocent people not too often, one hopes, but undoubtedly sometimes." Appendix ("A-")-90, Michael Ponsor, "Life, Death, and Uncertainty," Boston Globe, July 8, 2001, at D2.
There are compelling reasons to believe that Judge Ponsor's prediction is prophetic. Federal judges, like state judges, are human and, therefore, fallible. Jurors in federal cases are essentially the same citizens who serve as jurors in state cases. In addition, many federal cases, including this one, result from investigations conducted primarily, if not exclusively, by state and local law enforcement.
THE LIKELIHOOD OF ERROR IN DEATH PENALTY SENTENCING (pages 11-13)
Important errors are, however, not always identified prior to death sentences being imposed, at times because of misconduct by state and federal investigators. It is now clear that in 1967 Joseph Salvati and several other individuals were unfairly convicted because the FBI had withheld information that its informants, rather than the defendants, had murdered Edward Deegan, and had allowed its informants to testify falsely against the innocent men. Several of the defendants, including Peter Limone, were sentenced to death. While those death sentences were reduced to life in prison following the invalidation of the death penalty by Furman, two of the wrongfully convicted men died in prison. Salvati, who was originally sentenced to life in prison, receiveda commutation and was released in 1997. Limone was released in 2001, after his wrongful conviction had been demonstrated. See United States v. Flemmi, 195 F. Supp. 2d 243, 251 (D. Mass. 2001).
The
deliberate misconduct by federal investigators that was so belatedly
revealed with regard to the Deegan murder is neither ancient history
nor unique to Boston. Daniel Bright was, in 1996, convicted of murder
by the state of Louisiana and sentenced to death. Several months ago, a
federal judge found that the FBI had evidence that another person had
claimed to have committed the murder, but the FBI violated the
government's constitutional duty to disclose that evidence to Bright
before his trial, and later lied to the federal judge about its
existence. See Bright v. Ashcroft, 259 F. Supp. 2d 494 (E.D. La.
2003) and 259 F. Supp. 2d 502 (E.D. La. 2003).
The government misconduct concerning Salvati and Bright are not
isolated occurrences. A recent study of capital cases from 1973 to 1995
reported that one of the two most common errors prompting the reversal
of state convictions in which the defendant was sentenced to death was
the improper failure of police or prosecutors to disclose "important
evidence that the defendant was innocent or did not deserve to
die." James S. Liebman, et al., A Broken System: Error Rates in Capital
Cases, 1973-1995 at ii (2000). As indicated earlier, the performance
of state and local police is important to the operation of the
FDPA because many cases, including this one, have initially been
investigated by them and later brought in federal court, at times in an
effort to achieve a death sentence that is not available under state
law.
Serious errors appear to be common in capital cases. After analyzing more than 4500 appeals of capital cases, the same study found that "the overall rate of prejudicial error in the American capital punishment system was 68%. " Id. at i (emphasis in original). As the authors later wrote:
For cases whose outcomes are known, an astonishing 82% of retried death row inmates turned out not to deserve the death penalty; 7% were not guilty. The process took nine years on average. Put simply, most death verdicts are too flawed to carry out, and most flawed ones are scrapped for good. One in 20 death row inmates is later found not guilty.
A-284, James Liebman, et al., "Technical Errors Can Kill," Nat'l L.J., Sept. 4, 2000, at A16.
In view of the foregoing, this court agrees with Judge Ponsor, among others, that the FDPA, like the state death penalty statutes, will inevitably result in the execution of innocent people. Since a majority of the Supreme Court stated in 1993 that the execution of an innocent person would be unconstitutional, the critical question is how many of those who will be executed must be innocent to offend contemporary standards of decency and, therefore, render the FDPA unconstitutional.
STANDARDS OF DECENCY (pages 15-16)
As described earlier, courts are required to discern contemporary standards of decency from objective factors to the maximum possible extent. Those factors demonstrate the following.In 1791, the concept of "cruel and unusual punishment" incorporated in the Eighth Amendment was imported from English law. England and other nations that share our heritage have now abolished capital punishment.
Recent
opinion polls show that 73% of Americans believe that our nation's
death penalty statutes have resulted in the execution of an innocent
person in the past five years. Nevertheless, 74% say they support
the death penalty. However, only a slight majority (53%) prefer it to
life in prison without parole (44%) for convicted murderers.
The decisions of juries in recent FDPA cases indicate that there
is a definite disparity between the attitudes of Americans toward
the death penalty in general and their willingness to impose it
in particular cases. In sixteen of the last seventeen penalty phase
verdicts returned by juries in FDPA cases the defendant was not
sentenced to death. In fifteen of those sixteen cases the defendant had
been convicted of a federal crime involving murder. Therefore, juries
have recently been regularly disagreeing with the Attorney General's
contention that the death penalty is justified in the most
egregious federal cases involving murder.
FUTURE ELIMINATION OF THE DEATH PENALTY (pages 17-19)
In Atkins the Supreme Court essentially held that because Virginia diverged from the substantial consensus that had emerged in legislation, decisions of prosecutors, and jury verdicts in many other states, it was arbitrary and capricious and, therefore, cruel and unusual for a retarded person in Virginia to face execution when a similarly situated individual in another jurisdiction would not. If the evolution of events concerning the general imposition of the death penalty parallels the developments described in Atkins concerning the execution of the retarded, the day may come when courts properly can and should declare the ultimate sanction to be unconstitutional in all cases.
However, that day has not come yet. There is not now sufficient objective evidence to establish that the death penalty offends contemporary standards of decency to permit a court to end political debate and democratic decisionmaking concerning its propriety.
Nevertheless, "the Clause forbidding 'cruel and unusual' punishments . . . 'may acquire meaning as public opinion becomes enlightened by a humane justice.'" Gregg, 428 U.S. at 171 (quoting Weems v. United States, 217 U.S. 349, 378 (1910)). Judges seek to administer humane justice. Judicial decisions are part of a colloquy with citizens and those they elect to make and execute our laws. Those decisions have the potential to influence contemporary standards of decency and, therefore, the current meaning of the Eighth Amendment.
While this court does not find that the risk of executing the innocent now renders the FDPA unconstitutional, the record regarding this issue raises profound questions. Those questions are not hypothetical. Rather, as demonstrated by the experiences of Salvati and Bright, among others, those questions are real and recurring.
Error is, of course, possible in any criminal case. While our system promises everyone a fair trial, it does not pretend to perform perfectly. However, as the Supreme Court has repeatedly reiterated, "[t]he penalty of death differs from all other forms of criminal punishment not in degree but in kind. It is unique in its total irrevocabality." Furman, 408 U.S. at 306 (Stewart, J., concurring);5 see also Ring, 536 U.S. at 605-06; Harmelin v. Michigan, 501 U.S. 957, 994 (1991); Gardner v. Florida, 430 U.S. 349, 357 (1977) (Stevens, J.) (plurality opinion). Among other things, an execution eliminates the opportunity to end any injustice, even belatedly. Thus, this court will strive to provide the government and Sampson as fair a trial as possible.
INEVITABLE EXECUTION OF THE INNOCENT (pages 54-55)
This court agrees that "executing the innocent is inconsistent with the Constitution." Id. at 419 (O'Connor, J. and Kennedy, J., concurring). The open issues in this case are whether the FDPA will inevitably result in the execution of innocent individuals and, if so, whether this renders the statute unconstitutional, and inapplicable to Sampson because it is an invalid law. For the reasons described below, the court finds that: the FDPA will inevitably result in the execution of innocent individuals; there is not now, however, a proper basis to declare the FDPA unconstitutional for this reason; and, therefore, it is not necessary to decide Sampson's claim that he has a right not to be tried under an unconstitutional statute.
EVIDENCE OF THE RISK (pages 56-57)
Since 1973, more than 100 innocent people have been released from death rows. See A-27, Death Penalty Information Center, "Facts About the Death Penalty"; A-97, Affidavit of Richard Dieter. In January 2003, the Governor of Illinois commuted the death sentences of more than 150 individuals awaiting execution in that state after previously determining that seventeen people on Illinois' death row were actually innocent. See A-288; see also Alex Kotlowitz, "In the Face of Death," N.Y. Times Sunday Magazine, July 6, 2003, at 32, 34. One of those individuals was "Anthony Porter, who spent no less than 16 years on death row until prosecutors decided they had made a mistake (upon which determination they then brought murder charges against a different suspect, who confessed)." Quinones, 205 F. Supp. 2d at 265.
JURORS IN DEATH PENALTY CASES (pages 72-75)
In
2003, District Judge James Jones of Virginia stated that:
After having recently spent several weeks . . . individually interviewing in voir dire nearly two hundred prospective jurors on their attitudes toward the death penalty, I am convinced that our fellow citizens are largely conflicted about the death penalty. Many favor it in principle in the appropriate case, but are concerned about it in practice.
Church, 217 F. Supp. 2d at 702-03; see also Kotlowitz, supra ("Faced
with the decision to execute or not, pro-death penalty jurors are
increasingly sparing lives."). There is evidence to validate Judge
Jones' insight.
The
decisions of juries in recent FDPA cases indicate that there is a
definite disparity between attitudes toward the death penalty in
principle and the willingness of federal jurors to impose it when they
are fully informed about a particular case, and their decision will
have real and serious consequences. The death penalty is sought only in
those eligible federal cases in which the Attorney General has
personally decided that it is justified. DOJ Study at 5, 26. Jurors who
express an unyielding general unwillingness to impose the death penalty
may not serve in a capital case. See Witt, supra; Witherspoon, supra.
Nevertheless, in sixteen of the last seventeen penalty phase
verdicts returned by juries in FDPA cases the defendant has not been
sentenced to death.16 A-38, A-41, A-66 to A-67; Def.'s Supp. Mem.;
Def.'s Second Supp. Mem.; Def.'s Fourth Supp. Mem. In fifteen of those
sixteen cases the defendant was convicted of a crime involving murder.
Id.17
As described earlier, the Supreme Court has repeatedly reiterated that the decisions of citizens as jurors are " 'a significant and reliable index of contemporary values.'" Atkins, 536 U.S. at 323 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting) (quoting Coker, 433 U.S. at 596 (plurality opinion) and Gregg, 428 U.S. at 181). In finding the death sentence to be cruel and unusual punishment for rape in Coker, the Supreme Court "credited data showing that 'at least 9 out of 10' juries in Georgia did not impose the death sentence for rape convictions." Id. (quoting Coker, 433 U.S. at 596-97). The statistical sample may now be too small to draw any definite conclusions from the most recent FDPA jury verdicts. However, if juries continue to reject the death penalty in the most egregious federal cases, the courts will have significant objective evidence that the ultimate sanction is not compatible with contemporary standards of decency.
OTHER
RESOURCES
The Death Penalty Information
Center (Deathpenaltyinfo.org) notes:
ADDITIONAL
RESOURCES
If you have found this e-zine
useful feel free to pass it on to a friend or colleague. You might also
want to visit:
http://www.lidab.com/
(Louisiana's public defender), probono.net
(ABA/ABCNY) & http://www.capdefnet.org/
(federal defender & arguably the best death penalty defense site on
the net). These other resources have many prepackaged
motions
and law guides dealing with death penalty issue. Findlaw.com
's new service provides e-mail style newsletters on a wide variety of
subjects
at newsletters.findlaw.com
, including both a free weekly free criminal law and limited state
court
decision lists. For information generally on the death penalty please
visit
the Death Penalty Information Center (http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org).
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