December 10, 2016
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Muslim NYPD officers request meeting with Trump after spike in hate crimes
Yahoo News Hunter Walker
National Correspondent
Yahoo NewsDecember 10, 2016
A group of Muslim New York City police officers, including a cop who was a victim of an alleged hate crime earlier this month, has asked to meet with President-elect Donald Trump. Thus far Trump has not responded to their request.
Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams wrote to Trump on Dec. 6 (see below) to ask him to meet with Officer Aml Elsokary and “several of her colleagues from the NYPD Muslim Officers Society.” Elsokary was the victim of an alleged hate crime in Brooklyn last weekend, when she said she saw a man shoving her 16-year-old son. Elsokary, who was off-duty at the time, said the man then referred to her as a member of the Islamic State terrorist group, threatened to cut her throat and told her to go back to her country. Christopher Nelson, 36, was arrested and charged with menacing as a hate crime.
The push for a meeting with Trump came after Elsokary and other members of the NYPD Muslim Officers Society appeared at Brooklyn Borough Hall with Adams to discuss the incident. Elsokary, who was cited for bravery by the department in 2014 after she and her partner rushed into a burning building to save a baby, delivered tearful remarks in which she predicted that New Yorkers “are going to be there to help me and be supportive.” After they spoke, Adams brought up the idea of arranging a meeting with Trump. Elsokary and the other officers asked him to set it up.
In his letter to Trump, Adams cited the NYPD’s claim that there has been a 115 percent spike in hate crimes in New York City since Election Day. Adams, a former police officer, described this as part of a national trend driven by “deep tensions that have persisted around our great country in the weeks following a long and arduous national election” and “the rhetoric of this campaign season.”
Trump has been criticized for using divisive rhetoric during his presidential campaign, particularly his hard-line stance against Muslim immigration to the U.S. Though Trump has called for any of his supporters who have participated in racist attacks or incidents of vandalism to “stop,” the president-elect has taken heat for not doing more to denounce hate crimes. In his letter, Adams said Trump could offer “guidance” and reassurance to the country’s larger Muslim-American community.
“This meeting request is rooted in both deep substance and symbolism. The 900 Muslim-American members of our nation’s largest police department, part of a greater law enforcement fraternity that encompasses thousands of our citizens and their families, deserve guidance on how they will be protected amid this uncertain national climate, just as they protect our streets every day,” Adams wrote. “Moreover the welfare of these officers speaks to the greater welfare of the millions of law-abiding Muslim-Americans, many of whom are fearful at this critical juncture in our history,” he added.
Yahoo News reached out to Trump’s presidential transition team to see if he would meet with the officers. Trump spokeswoman Hope Hicks said she believed that Trump had received Adams’ letter but was unsure if the meeting would be scheduled.
“I just don’t have an update on the status of this,” Hicks wrote Friday.
In a statement to Yahoo News, Adams said he would bring the Muslim officers’ “message” to Trump’s Manhattan headquarters, Trump Tower, even if they were not invited to meet with the president-elect.
“President-elect Trump needs to hear from and respond to the concerns of Officer Elsokary and other Muslim members of our law enforcement community. They are not only the first line of defense on our streets; they are ambassadors of the American diversity that they represent, and millions of their brother and sister citizens are as concerned about their welfare as they are their own. Whether or not we have an invitation to Trump Tower, I promise that their message will be directly delivered,” said Adams.
According to a source in Adams’ office, the Brooklyn borough president and Officer Elsokary plan to visit Trump Tower to deliver another letter in the coming days if they are not invited to meet with Trump.
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December 10, 2016
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NYPD Seeks Cure for Gun Violence With Data-Driven Cases New York City is again on pace to have a near-record low number of shootings since 1993
By Tom Hays
New York City is again on pace to have a near-record low number of shootings, and police are partly crediting refined tactics that include collecting more data and forensic evidence than ever before to go after the worst offenders.
"It's no longer good enough to just make an arrest," said Deputy Commissioner Durmot Shea, a top New York Police Department crime-fighting strategist. The department is also trying to focus harder, he said, on the kind of arrests that make a difference by targeting a relatively small number of people responsible for making neighborhoods unsafe.
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Through Dec. 4, the city had recorded 942 shooting incidents, putting the city on course to have even fewer than the 1,103 in 2013 — the lowest number since the police department began counting shootings in 1993.
A majority of people who have been shot survived. As of Dec. 4, the city had recorded 313 killings, close to the 333 set in 2014.
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Still, it's not clear whether the crime reductions in New York are due to refined police tactics or other factors, like a continuing influx of wealth into the city.
Chicago, which has roughly a third of the population of New York, has adopted a similar philosophy of quality-over-quantity gun arrests, yet the number of shootings and homicides there has soared.
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Through the end of November, it had recorded more than 700 killings, the first time Chicago has eclipsed the 700 mark in a year since 1998. Chicago is on pace to have nearly 300 more homicides this year than last year.
Alex Vitale, a sociologist at Brooklyn College, said targeted policing may make more sense in New York because, compared to Chicago, gun violence is concentrated in smaller pockets of poverty.
The drop in the number of shootings also comes in an era when the department is making fewer arrests overall and has vastly curtailed a strategy nicknamed "stop and frisk" that involved halting and searching hundreds of thousands of young men on the street to make sure they weren't carrying weapons.
New York City police made 54,000 fewer arrests in 2015 than they did in 2013. Much of the decline was due to arresting far fewer people for possessing small amounts of marijuana.
As overall crime has dropped in New York, police have poured additional resources into investigating crimes that might have previously gotten a less intensive treatment.
In one recent case, police who came across an abandoned, shot-up rental car took care to collect ballistic and DNA evidence that was saved until it was matched to a gun found in a Manhattan hotel.
The link turned out to be a key break in an investigation of a Brooklyn gang best known for its affiliation with "Hot Boy" rapper Bobby Shurmda. Prosecutors parlayed that and other evidence into a string of convictions and long prison terms, said Special Narcotics Prosecutor Bridget Brennan, whose office handled the case.
After street gang members spread panic by drawing their guns for a shootout last year near a grade school in the Far Rockaway section of Queens, investigators studied forensic and video evidence from other shootings, tips from informants and logs of suspects who had themselves been wounded in past gunfights.
The NYPD says the targeted policing approach resulted in 12 arrests. After that, shootings in the two police precincts that cover Far Rockaway dropped by 65 percent.
Police cite the takedown of Shurmda's gang as a game-changer. In one precinct where it roamed, there have been 14 shootings so far this year, compared to 36 in 2014 over the same period.
Amy Wilkerson, a social worker with Rock Safe Streets, a gun violence intervention program in Far Rockaway run by the nonprofit Sheltering Arms, said the neighborhood still has a long way to go.
"To say we locked up a few people and gun violence is down shows a disconnect," she said. "There are people in this community who are afraid to send their children outside because of gun violence. It's a disease. Taking one person out doesn't work because other people are infected."
Source: NYPD Seeks Cure for Gun Violence With Data-Driven Cases | NBC New York
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December 8, 2016
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From DNA Info
Driver Runs Into 'Trump Traffic' Officer, Calls Her 'B---h,' NYPD Says By Maya Rajamani | December 7, 2016 8:08am A truck driver accelerated into an officer directing traffic near Trump Tower and called the officer a “stupid b---h” after being asked to turn left off of Fifth Avenue, officials said.
A truck driver accelerated into an officer directing traffic near Trump Tower and called the officer a “stupid b---h” after being asked to turn left off of Fifth Avenue, officials said.
MIDTOWN — A truck driver nearly ran over an NYPD officer directing traffic near Trump Tower, calling her a "stupid b---h" after she told him to turn off of Fifth Avenue, authorities said.
Carlos Arana, 44, was driving a white Dodge truck southbound on Fifth Avenue, near East 58th Street, around 9:20 a.m. on Nov. 29 when an officer assigned to “Trump traffic detail” told him to make a left turn onto 57th Street, police and a complaint filed with the Manhattan District Attorney’s office said.
But instead of following the officer’s directions, Arana stepped on the gas, the complaint said.
When the officer approached his truck and told him to pull over, Arana responded with “F--- you," the complaint said.
The officer then walked in front of his truck to write down his license plate number, at which point Arana lurched his truck forward, the complaint said.
When the officer told him to turn his engine off, he called her a "stupid b---h” and accelerated again, forcing her to push against the hood of the truck to get out of the way, prosecutors said.
As other police officers approached the truck, Arana “created a scene" and refused to hand his driver’s license over to one of them, police said.
He only complied after police had surrounded his vehicle, the NYPD said.
The officer who first tried to stop Arana was taken to a local emergency room to be treated for left wrist, elbow and shoulder pain that required a splint up to the left elbow, the complaint noted.
Arana was charged with assault, and his bail was set at $2,500, the DA's office said.
The city's Department of Correction did not have records indicating where Arana was being held or whether he had been released.
His attorney did not respond to request for comment Tuesday.
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December 7, 2016
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NYPD spied on Black Lives Matter during Eric Garner protests — but won’t release any info, group says Black Lives Matter protesters say the NYPD slipped undercover agents into their midst.
Black Lives Matter protesters say the NYPD slipped undercover agents into their midst. (SAM COSTANZA/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS)
BY
VICTORIA BEKIEMPIS
THOMAS TRACY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Thursday, December 8, 2016, 12:56 AM
Members of Black Lives Matter appeared in Manhattan Supreme Court on Wednesday to demand the NYPD release information on how it monitored protests on high-profile police-involved deaths.
Protesters said the NYPD used undercover surveillance at the demonstrations over the chokehold death of Eric Garner on Staten Island and shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.
The group argues that the NYPD bow to a Freedom of Information law request to release details of any surveillance of protests that took place in Grand Central Terminal between November 2014 and November 2015.
So far, the NYPD has refused to hand over the documents.
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“State law says the NYPD can’t operate in secret — the NYPD has to disclose what it's doing,” said attorney David Thompson. “But the NYPD completely refused to obey that law so we had to file this lawsuit.”
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Thompson called the refusal to turn over the information a “failure of the NYPD in this case to deal honestly and forthrightly with its obligations under FOIL.”
Among the reasons for denying the request, the NYPD said providing the information would “would interfere with law enforcement investigations” and “identify confidential sources.”
During the hearing in Manhattan Supreme Court, Thompson said the excuse shows that the NYPD is treating Black Lives Matter “the same as ISIS or the Bonanno crime family. “
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“You won’t find any mention of an actual criminal investigation,” Thompson said. “There’s no crime here. What we have is the NYPD which is being criticized by Black Lives Matter. In return, the NYPD was engaged in a political response of surveilling their critics.”
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Demonstrators staged a “choke-in” at Grand Central Terminal in December 2014. (JAMES KEIVOM/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS)
Judge Manuel Mendez is expected to render a decision in the next few weeks.
The NYPD did not return a request for comment Wednesday.
The city refuted Thompson’s allegations, claiming the case was simply a request for documents — nothing more.
“It’s really beyond the scope of this proceeding and improper,” city attorney Lesly Mbaye said. “(The) petitioner wants to make this a political case, as they said today — it’s a FOIL case.”
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December 6, 2016
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The NYCLU Will Continue to Watch the NYPD, so Its Lawyers Don’t Institutionalize a Protester Prosecution Program By Simon McCormack, Communications Officer, New York Civil Liberties Union; Contributing Writer, Speak Freely
DECEMBER 6, 2016 | 1:30 PM Police officers stand outside their patrol car during Nov. 12, 2016, anti-Trump protests in New York City.
Police officers stand outside their patrol car during Nov. 12, 2016, anti-Trump protests in New York City. (Photo: Tom Heinze/Flickr)
People who take to the streets to protest should not be subject to a different form of justice than everyone else. But lawyers for the NYPD are doing exactly that when they selectively step in and act as prosecutors in cases that involve demonstrators, reportedly to keep those protesters from suing the department for false arrest.
The eyebrow-raising agreement between the Manhattan district attorney’s office and the NYPD, in which the district attorney allows NYPD lawyers to prosecute certain criminal summons cases, was revealed by the New York Daily News earlier this year. Police officials told the Daily News that the arrangement came about after the NYPD grew frustrated with paying out settlements to protesters who sue after their summonses are dismissed. It’s important to note that the NYPD gets sued a lot. Over the last five years, the city shelled out $837 million in lawsuits brought against the police.
But when an NYPD lawyer steps in as a prosecutor, they aren’t necessarily looking out for the best interests of justice. Their top priority is protecting their department. In some instances, as the Daily News reported, NYPD lawyers acting as prosecutors have offered protesters the chance to make their charges go away if they admit to certain acts that would establish probable cause. This makes it more difficult for demonstrators to later sue the NYPD for costly damages, even if the officers violated their rights.
There is a danger that this way of doing things could mean demonstrators will receive a different version of justice than those accused of other crimes. It could also mean that protesters could be coerced into signing away their rights to sue out of fear that they could end up with a criminal record. These dangers aren’t lost on protesters. Two Black Lives Matter protesters sued the Manhattan district attorney’s office last month for allowing the NYPD to play prosecutor.
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ACT NOWThis arrangement also poses troubling risks to free speech. These dangers are all the clearer following the election of Donald Trump, whose campaign proposals shaped by hate, fear, and bigotry have already sparked widespread protest. We can safely expect thousands of people regularly marching in the streets of New York City if Trump tries to implement his dangerous agenda and those protesters should not be deterred by the threat of an NYPD lawyer putting pressure on them in order to benefit the department.
After learning of the arrangement between the police and the district attorney’s office, the New York Civil Liberties Union raised our concerns over the NYPD playing prosecutor in a letter sent in June to the Manhattan District Attorney’s office. The district attorney’s office then issued new guidelines governing the arrangement in November. These guidelines should serve as a clear warning to the NYPD not to target demonstrators.
Under the new guidelines, the Manhattan district attorney makes it clear that the NYPD should focus on factors like whether a person has multiple prior convictions when deciding whether to send in a lawyer. The guidelines do not include factors like whether someone is likely to sue the police. This is a positive step, but it does not eliminate the conflict of interest that the district attorney’s agreement with the department presents. We will be tracking all future cases to make sure this doesn't turn into a rogue NYPD protester prosecution program.
This effort is all the more important in the wake of President-elect Trump’s election. Thousands have already protested Trump’s frightening proposed agenda, and dozens of them were arrested by the NYPD. If Trump tries to implement his campaign promises, those protests will continue.
Demonstrators should not have to worry about being prosecuted by NYPD lawyers out to make sure they don’t sue the department when its officers abuse their power.
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December 6, 2016
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NYPD search for ‘contract killer’ suspected of killing off-duty correction officer – report
Published time: 6 Dec, 2016 09:35
New York Police are reportedly searching for a contract killer believed to have carried out the fatal shooting of an off-duty corrections officer in Brooklyn. Investigators believe an inmate at the notorious Rikers Island Prison may have put a hit on her.
Alastasia Bryan, 25, was shot in the chest, stomach, right forearm, and right hand as she sat in her parked vehicle while making a phone call at around 9:15pm on Sunday, according to police sources cited by the New York Daily News. She was declared dead by authorities who later arrived at the scene.
Footage recovered from the scene appears to show the gunman reversing into a parking spot and waiting for Bryan to get into her car. He then fires five rounds into the driver’s side window before fleeing the scene, the sources said.
The sources told the news outlet that police are now searching for a contract killer who they suspect was hired by an inmate at Rikers Island Prison, where Bryan worked.
However, corrections officials reportedly told authorities that Bryan – who was still in training and did not carry a gun – had little to no contact with prisoners. Instead, she took part in administrative work at the prison’s Anna M. Kross Center.
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Police are also reportedly looking to question Bryan’s ex-boyfriend, who in May 2015 called and threatened to run her off the road after she clocked out at her previous job as a security official at Kingsborough Community College. He later followed through with his vow, charging her as she pulled out of the campus parking lot.
He called her again two days later, saying he would shoot up her house and have people watch her home, threatening to kill her if she told anyone about the threats, the sources said.
Bryan’s ex-boyfriend has been arrested 31 times, including twice in May 2015 for domestic incidents involving Bryan.
“We have a long way to go on this investigation,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce said, referencing the case. “We have some very strong leads.”
Police have impounded Bryan’s car for further investigation, and have searched the neighborhood for more surveillance which may lead to a suspect.
The Correction Officers' Benevolent Association (COBA) is offering a $50,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of Bryan’s killer.
Bryan had just begun her job as a corrections officer last month, having recently graduated from the city’s Correction Academy.
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December 6, 2016
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EXCLUSIVE: Former NYPD cop Peter Liang to end appeal after convicted of killing Akai GurleyFormer NYPD cop Peter Liang was convicted of killing Akai Gurley in November 2014. His lawyers will drop their appeal of his conviction. (MARY ALTAFFER/AP)
BY
CHRISTINA CARREGA
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Wednesday, December 7, 2016, 1:16 PM
Lawyers for a disgraced rookie cop who fired his gun in a dimly lit stairwell and killed an innocent man are expected to drop their appeal of his conviction, the Daily News has learned.
Peter Liang was found guilty earlier this year for the manslaughter death of Akai Gurley, 28, on Nov. 20, 2014, in an East New York housing project.
Liang, 29, and his partner Shaun Landau, also 29, stood by as the doomed man’s friend, Melissa Butler, frantically tried to save his life while receiving instructions from a neighbor a floor below in the Pink Houses.
Liang said at his April sentencing: “I was in shock. I could barely breathe. The shot was accidental, but someone was dead ... My life is forever changed. I hope I have a chance to rebuild it.”
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The rookies were fired from the NYPD immediately after the conviction that could have put Liang behind bars for up to 15 years.
Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Danny Chun reduced Liang’s conviction to criminal negligent homicide, and he was sentenced to 800 hours of community service. The Brooklyn district attorney’s office filed an appeal to overturn the judge’s reduction as Liang’s defense team filed a motion to overturn the conviction.
According to sources familiar with the case, both sides stipulated Tuesday they would drop their appeals.
Akai Gurley was accidentally shot and killed by a cop inside an East New York housing project.
Akai Gurley was accidentally shot and killed by a cop inside an East New York housing project.
"We stand by our prosecution of Peter Liang, holding him accountable for the shooting death of Akai Gurley. The decision by both sides to withdraw their appeals means that Mr. Liang has waived any and all rights to challenge his conviction in state or federal court. Given the unlikelihood that we would prevail on our appeal, this agreement is the best way to protect the integrity of the conviction and marks the end of a successful prosecution,” said Oren Yaniv, a spokesman for the Brooklyn DA.
“(Liang) has taken responsibility for the tragic accident and does not wish to cause any further emotional stress to Mr. Gurley’s family, nor NYC, so therefore will not appeal the conviction,” said Karlin Chan, community activist and supporter of Liang.
Since the conviction, Gurley’s daughter Akaila received a $4 million settlement — Liang was ordered to pay $25,000 of it — from the city for her father’s death.
The emotional distress lawsuit Butler, 29, filed was dismissed.
Prosecutor Marc Fliedner resigned to start his own practice and prosecutor Joseph Alexis was recently named the chief of trial bureaus, as well as a liaison for the office.
Liang completed his community service at a senior citizens center near Sheepshead Bay just before Thanksgiving and is looking for a job.
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December 6, 2016
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Reinvent Albany: NYPD Needs to Open Up Its Traffic Summons Data by David Meyer
Last week, the NYPD unveiled an online view of “TrafficStat,” the department’s system for tracking traffic crashes. While the site has some data that’s not available on DOT’s Vision Zero View tool, it leaves a lot to be desired, according to the government accountability and transparency watchdog Reinvent Albany.
The NYPD is making its "TrafficStat" tool available to the public. Image: NYPD
NYPD’s “TrafficStat” map falls short . Image: NYPD
In a blog post today, Reinvent Albany notes that the TrafficStat site merely maps data that was already available. And crucially, NYPD’s portal lacks data about where police are enforcing traffic laws, which the agency has refused to release for years.
Geo-tagged information about summonses remains the key missing piece of open NYPD data. Without it, the public has no insight into how traffic enforcement efforts are linked to crash-prone locations. Open data on summonses, says Reinvent Albany, would be “extremely useful to researchers who want to understand the connection between police enforcement and traffic injuries and deaths, and to advocates and community leaders who are concerned about the level of police traffic enforcement in their neighborhood.”
Reinvent Albany also says NYPD needs to do a better job of making its underlying crash data publicly accessible. There is currently no way to get this data via the Traffic Stat site, event though it’s available from the city’s open data portal:
At the very least, the TrafficStat map ought to directly link to the data on the open data portal. Currently, users have to click “Additional Information” on the TrafficStat page, then click “Maps & Data”, and then scroll to the bottom of that page and click the link to the data in the disclaimer. However, this takes users to the Department of Transportation’s Vision Zero data set. It does not appear that the NYPD links to its own data (with summons) anywhere.
Ultimately, says Reinvent Albany, NYPD “should spend less time building new maps which lock up its data, and link users to the department’s accomplishments on the NYC open data portal.”
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December 5, 2016
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Bronx DA calls for grand jury in fatal NYPD shooting By Jamie Schram A special grand jury will weigh possible criminal charges against an NYPD sergeant who fatally shot a 66-year-old bat-wielding woman, the Bronx district attorney said Monday.
“It is important to determine exactly what happened in this tragic incident,” DA Darcel Clark said in a statement.
Clark said she was going to ask the courts “to impanel a special grand jury’’ to hear the case against Sgt. Hugh Barry.
A law-enforcement source said the decision to take the case to a grand jury wasn’t easy.
“There was a genuine debate over the best course of action,’’ the source said.
“Some people in the bureau are saying that the grand jury is the most appropriate venue to present all the evidence for determination of whether or not to bring criminal charges.
“The other school of thought believes it’s the office trying to project to the community that we are treating it seriously and trying to mitigate damage to community relations in a case the office believes it doesn’t have much chance [to win] at trial.”
Barry shot schizophrenic Deborah Danner in her apartment Oct. 18 after she grabbed a bat and rushed him, authorities have said.
Barry’s union has said he feared for his life.
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