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The Internet Anti-Fascist: Friday, 11 Feb 2000 -- 4:13 (#388)



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            The Internet Anti-Fascist: Friday, 11 February 2000
                         Vol. 4, Number 13 (#388)
__________________________________________________________________________

CONTENTS
Movie & Book Review
   "Selma, Lord, Selma" 96 min., 1998, Walt Disney Home Video
Matt Hale and the World Church of the Creator In Court(s)
   Anita Szoke (Journal Star), "Hale's lawsuit against state dismissed --
      Judge: Hale can't represent church against Department of Revenue," 5
      Feb 00
   Andy Kravetz (Journal Star), "Judge dismisses state's suit against Hale:
      World Church of Creator can keep financial records, contributor names
      to itself," 9 Feb 00
   AP, "Racist Appeals to Supreme Court," 11 Feb 00
Mississippi / Federal Government Reopen 1964 Klan Assassination Case
   AP, "FBI says 1964 case reopened," 6 Feb 00
   Jerry Mitchell (Clarion-Ledger), "Activist slayings reopened: FBI
      turning over files on 1964 killings of three civil rights workers," 8
      Feb 00
   Jerry Mitchell (Clarion-Ledger), "Grand jury examining evidence in '66
       death: Klan killing one of three federal reinvestigations," 8 Feb 00
   Jerry Mitchell (Clarion-Ledger), "Justice Department attorney observes
       grand jury testimony: Investigation into Ben White slaying drawing
       serious federal scutiny," 9 Feb 00
Rightwing Quote of the Week

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MOVIE & BOOK REVIEW: Selma, Lord, Selma

This movie has just been released in video and is, at least, at
Blockbuster. Certainly not perfect, it is however something you might want
to show your children and other young people to give them a bit of history
of the civil rights movement. --  tallpaul

BURBANK, Calif.--(ENTERTAINMENT WIRE)--Sept. 3, 1998-- Dramatization of
Historical Event in Civil Rights Movement

Co-Stars Yolanda King, Daughter of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Production begins this week in Griffin, Ga., on "Selma, Lord, Selma," a
two-hour movie based on two little girls' memories of the infamous violent
Bloody Sunday in Selma, Ala., during the tumultuous American civil rights
movement of the 1960s.

The dramatization, starring MacKenzie Astin ("The Long Island Incident"),
Jurnee Smollett ("Eve's Bayou"), Clifton Powell ("Deep Rising") and Yolanda
King ("Ghost of Mississippi"), will air this season on "The Wonderful World
of Disney."

Executive Producer Julian Fowles, a participant in the movement in New York
and a former attorney for the NAACP, had good reason to want to produce
"Selma, Lord, Selma."

"I realized how important it was for people to be involved in voting, and I
was inspired by what these people did to get the right to vote. The right
to vote was such an important part of what we were involved in at the
NAACP," he remembered.

Astin, Smollett and Powell, along with Yolanda King who plays Amelia
Boynton, the daughter of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and
Elizabeth Omilami, the daughter of civil rights leader Hosea Williams, star
in this poignant drama based on the true story of the many freedom fighters
who organized a Black voter registration march amidst Southern violence,
hatred, racial prejudice and the ever-present threat of the Ku Klux Klan.

Two black schoolgirls, Sheyann Webb (Smollett) and Rachel West (Stephanie
Peyton), are astonished when the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King (Powell)
arrives in their town with young seminary student Jonathan Daniels (Astin)
to organize a series of black voter registration marches.

The first sign of danger comes when a burning cross is placed in the front
yard of the local Black church and then again when marchers are arrested on
their way to the voter registration office in Selma.

Despite her parents' concern for the danger involved, 11-year-old Sheyann
felt it was necessary and important to participate in Dr. King's movement.
She and her friend Rachel were two of the youngest participants in the
march which brought about such an important change in America's way of
life.

Because of the many people who risked and lost their lives, the Voting
Rights Act was signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson, and the
journey toward African-American freedom began.

"The real story, as told by these little girls, was awesome," Fowles said.
"This was the turning point in their lives. It was a defining moment and
the most important thing that happened to both of them. They were part of
the solution. What a tremendous legacy to leave."

Shooting in Griffin and Selma, "Selma, Lord, Selma" is produced by
Esparza/Katz productions in association with Walt Disney Television.
Fowles, Moctesuma Esparza and Bob Katz executive produce. Charles Burnett
("The Wedding") directs from a script by Cynthia Whitcomb and Monte
Merrick.

- - - - -

Selma, Lord, Selma
Girlhood Memories of the Civil-Rights Days
Sheyann Webb and Rachel West Nelson as told to Frank Sikora

This moving firsthand account puts the 1965 struggle for Civil Rights in
Selma, Alabama, in very human terms.

Sheyann Webb was eight years old and Rachel West was nine when Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., arrived in Selma, Alabama, on January 2, 1965, to
organize peaceful demonstrations to protest discriminatory voting laws.
Selma, Lord, Selma is their firsthand account of the events of that
turbulent winter of 1965- events that changed the lives of all Alabamians
and all Americans. From 1975 to 1979 journalist Frank Sikora conducted
interviews with the two young women and wove their recollections into the
poignant story of fear and courage, heartbreak, and determination that is
Selma, Lord, Selma.

****A selection of Book-of-the-Month Club and the Quality Paperback Book
Club. Featured as a work of special merit by The National Conference of
Christians and Jews and the American Library Association****

A winner on the Best Books list is Selma, Lord, Selma, in which author
Frank Sikora has simply and intensely evoked the bitter struggle of the
1965 civil rights marches in Selma through the memories of Sheyann Webb and
Rachel West Nelson. Wilson Library Bulletin

September
168 pages, 6 x 9, illustrated
ISBN 0-8173-0898-9
$15.95t paper

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MATT HALE AND WORLD CHURCH OF THE CREATOR IN COURT(S)

Hale's lawsuit against state dismissed -- Judge: Hale can't represent
    church against Department of Revenue
Anita Szoke (Journal Star)
5 Feb 00

PEKIN - Matt Hale's lawsuit against the Illinois Department of Revenue was
thrown out Friday by a Tazewell County judge.

Hale, the leader of the East Peoria-based World Church of the Creator,
filed  the lawsuit last month in Tazewell County seeking a judge's order to
stop the  state from trying to collect sales tax it says Hale owes from the
sale of the  racist group's books and shirts.

Hale said the items his group sells, including a T-shirt espousing the
destruction of the Jewish religion, are religious in nature and therefore
don't fall under state sales tax laws.

Judge Robert Barnes said the party involved in the dispute is Hale's  so-
called church, an unincorporated association, but Hale, who signed the
complaint against the Department of Revenue, is not an attorney, so he
can't  legally represent the organization.

Further, the judge agreed with assistant Attorney Gener al John R. Simpson,
who said Hale failed to follow other, more appropriate, legal remedies to
get  what he wants, such as filing an administrative protest with the
Department  of Revenue and having an administrative review.

Or Hale could have, like any other taxpayer, challenged the alleged
liability  through a suit under the "protest moneys" provision, where he
pays money to  the state's protest fund and files a lawsuit to determine if
the money is due  to the state or not, Simpson said.

The judge said Hale failed to follow those remedies and dismissed his
complaint.

"I respectfully disagree with the judge," Hale said after the hearing,
adding  that he plans to appeal the judge's ruling.

"This will be a long, drawn- out process in which I hope to obtain an
injunction."

Hale said he feels he is entitled to represent his church even though he
isn't a licensed attorney because it is not a legal entity - he says it's a
"voluntary unincorporated association." The World Church is not a legal
entity that must have a licensed attorney represent it in court, Hale
argued.

Further, Hale pointed to media accounts that said state officials would
garnish his wages if he doesn't pay the tax es. Therefore, since he is
still  personally liable, he "must be allowed to represent his church and
personal  interests" in the case, Hale wrote in legal documents.

Hale still faces a lawsuit by Illinois Attorney General Jim Ryan, who sued
him and his church last year in the wake of former church member Ben
Smith's  murderous road trip that left two dead and nine wounded. The suit
alleges the  organization is an unregistered charity and, therefore, must
provide a full  accounting of its finances.

Hale disputes that, saying his group is a legitimate church and therefore
shouldn't have to show the state its records.

- - - - -

Judge dismisses state's suit against Hale: World Church of Creator can keep
    financial records, contributor names to itself
Andy Kravetz (Journal Star)
9 Feb 00

CHICAGO - White supremacist Matt Hale won his latest legal skirmish against
the state of Illinois on Tuesday when a judge ruled his World Church of the
Creator was not a charitable organization under state law.

Cook County Circuit Court Judge Julia Nowicki granted Hale's motion to
dismiss a lawsuit filed last July by Attorney General Jim Ryan against Hale
and his group.

In her 17-page decision, she held the state's Solicitation for Charity Act
was unconstitutionally vague and "therefore violative of the defendants'
First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of free speech and due process."

She further wrote: "The terms used to define 'charitable organizations' are
themselves undefined and so generic as to fail to provide adequate notice
as  to which entities are subject to the Act ..."

Dan Anders, a spokesman for Ryan's Chicago office, said the attorney
general  planned to ask Nowicki to reconsider her decision. If she will
not, Ryan's  office could ultimately appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court.

What Tuesday's ruling means is Hale, 28, won't have to turn over the World
Church's financial records to the state nor will he have to tell Ryan's
office who gives money to his organization.

"Certainly the dragon has been slain today," Hale said from his East Peoria
home. "The attorney general wanted to ride in on a white horse and save the
residents of Illinois.

"He has been defeated," he continued. "Everyone knew it was a political
stunt  on his part, and his stunt has failed."

Anders denied the suit was brought about due to political reasons. Ryan
filed  his suit days after former church member Ben Smith went on a
murderous road  trip where he killed two people and wounded nine before
killing himself.

Ryan's office contended that since Hale calls his group a church and a
not-for-profit group, it therefore falls under the common law definition of
a  charitable organization and is subject to the Solicitation Act.

The attorney general also wanted a judge to rule on Hale's tax-exempt
status.  If Ryan was successful, Nowicki could have ordered the World
Church to pay  sales tax on items it sells such as books and shirts.

"This has never been a political attack against Mr. Hale," Anders said.
"The  attorney general's job is to protect the integrity of the charitable
assets  in Illinois."

Hale's attorney, Glenn Greenwald, disagreed and said the judge's decision
reinforces that.

"Government officials are not permitted to silence and harass citizens
simply  because the government doesn't like their views," he said, adding
Nowicki's  decision could affect other charities in the state.

Because law is built upon precedence or previous legal decisions, Nowicki's
ruling that the Solicitation Act is too vague to be enforced could mean
other  charities might not have to comply with the Act as well.

Anders said that wasn't the case; that Nowicki's displeasure with the Act's
vagueness applies only in Hale's case.

In a similar case, a Tazewell County circuit judge dismissed Hale's suit
last  week against the state Department of Revenue in which he was trying
to stop  the state from trying to collect sales tax from the World Church.
Hale has  repeatedly vowed he would not pay tax on anything his group
sells.

In his opinion, the judge said Hale should have sought measures other than
a  lawsuit and said Hale couldn't act as an attorney for his group. Hale
has  said he would appeal.

- - - - -

Racist Appeals to Supreme Court
AP
11 Feb 00

PEORIA, Ill. - A white supremacist who was denied a law license has asked
the  Supreme Court to review the decision by the state of Illinois.

A lawyer for Matthew Hale said the petition filed Thursday focuses on a
statement by the state Committee on Character and Fitness that Hale was
denied the license at least in part because of his views on race.

"The reason they should hear this case is because this is political
correctness run rampant, political correctness overstepping its
boundaries,"  Robert Herman said.

Hale, leader of the segregationist World Church of the Creator, was denied
a  license last summer. Committee members said his views would prevent him
from  fulfilling a lawyer's duty not to discriminate against litigants,
jurors,  witnesses or others for reasons of race, religion or national
origin. The  state Supreme Court declined to hear his appeal.

Shortly after the committee decision, a former member of the World Church
of  the Creator, Benjamin Smith, went on a shooting spree targeting
minorities,  killing two people and injuring several others before
committing suicide.

Hale later said the shootings "possibly happened" as a result of the
committee's action. The committee said Hale's remarks further proved he
lacks  the "moral character necessary to satisfy even minimal bar admission
standards."

Hale graduated from the law school at Southern Illinois University in 1998
and has passed the bar exam.

"Like it or not, I have a right to practice law and be a racist," he said
in a statement.

Herman said it could be months before the Supreme Court decides whether to
consider the case.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

MISSISSIPPI / FEDERAL GOVERNMENT REOPEN 1964 KLAN ASSASSINATION CASE

FBI says 1964 case reopened
AP
6 Feb 00

JACKSON - The FBI has reopened a 1964 investigation into the deaths of
Charles Eddie Moore and Henry Hezekia Dee allegedly at the hands of the Ku
Klux Klan.

The agency decided to reopen the case after The Clarion-Ledger reported
Jan.  14 that the killings of Moore and Dee took place on federal land,
according  to Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol reports. The FBI had not
been aware of  possible federal jurisdiction in the case.

"The case has been reopened," FBI spokeswoman Deborah Madden said.

Moore's brother praised the agency's action.

"Yes, it was bad back then, but people are trying to make it right now,"
said Tom Moore, a counselor of troubled youth in Colorado Springs. "I'm
just  thrilled to death. I'm going home to tell my son."

The new probe into the killings of Moore and Dee is the second crime of the
past the FBI has decided to reinvestigate in recent months.

In November, FBI agents and federal prosecutors began to reinvestigate the
Klan's 1966 killing of Ben Chester White after learning from ABC 20/20
producer Harry Phillips that White was killed near Natchez in the
Homochitto  National Forest.

Klansmen hauled Moore and Dee into the same forest and killed them,
according  to documents.

Although the House Un-American Activities Committee questioned at least
five  men in connection with the killings of Dee and Moore, only two men
were  arrested - James Ford Seale, then a 29-year-old truck driver, and
Charles  Marcus Edwards, then a 31-year-old paper mill worker.

Three months after their November 1964 arrests, authorities dismissed those
charges, and the case was closed.

In recent interviews, both Seale and Edwards insisted on their innocence.

Asked whether he had anything to do with the deaths, Seale replied, "I
ain't  in jail, am I?"

According to HUAC testimony, Edwards told authorities he, Seale and unnamed
others beat Dee and Moore but left them alive.

Edwards, who lives in Meadville, has since denied making that statement. "I
don't know where they dug that junk up. There's not any truth to that," he
said in a recent interview.

- - - - -

Activist slayings reopened: FBI turning over files on 1964 killings of
    three civil rights workers
Jerry Mitchell (Clarion-Ledger)
8 Feb 00

A thorough investigation into the nation's most famous killings of the
civil  rights era is under way.

FBI spokesman Mike Turner said Monday the agency has turned over 40,000
pages  of its files to Attorney General Mike Moore in the investigation of
the 1964  killings of three civil rights workers in Neshoba County.

"We along with District Attorney Ken Turner (of Philadelphia) are reviewing
the files and the case to explore the possibility of pursuing state charges
against those involved," said Special Assistant Attorney General Lee
Martin.  "That is something we are actively doing at this time."

Last year, Turner began looking into the June 21, 1964, killings of Michael
Schwerner, Andrew Goodman and James Chaney after The Clarion-Ledger
reported  one-time Imperial Wizard Sam Bowers admitted in a secret
interview that he  had "obstructed justice" in the case and was "quite
delighted to be convicted  and have the main instigator of the entire
affair walk out of the courtroom a  free man. Everybody -- including the
trial judge and the prosecutors and  everybody else -- knows that that
happened."

Bowers never gave the man's name, but two confessions by Klansmen claim the
man who coordinated the killings of Goodman, Schwerner and Chaney was Edgar
Ray Killen of Union.

In 1967, a jury in U.S. District Court convicted Bowers and six other men
of conspiracy but Killen walked free when jurors deadlocked on a verdict
for him. No one was ever charged with murder.

The 75-year-old Killen, who still spends his days chopping wood, said
Monday  he didn't have any reaction to the release of the FBI documents. He
said he  was attending a wake at a funeral home the night of the killings
and had  nothing to do with them.

Asked about claims he coordinated the killings that night, Killen replied,
"I  don't think I have even read or heard nothing like that."

Asked what should happen to those responsible for killing Goodman,
Schwerner  and Chaney, Killen replied, "I don't know enough about what
happened. It  would be a leap in the dark."

But he indicated later he knew at least a few things about the case, known
as  the "Mississippi Burning" case, which was fictionally portrayed in a
1988  film of the same name.

His conclusion about the film?

"It's a long ways from factual from what I saw," he said.

A few weeks ago, the attorney general's office received the files,
contained  in seven bankers' boxes.

Observed Martin: "It's plenty."

He praised the FBI for sharing the files. "It has greatly expedited our
evaluation process," he said.

More files are expected. The FBI said Monday that what the agency has given
to state authorities is just a partial release, and the Mississippi Burning
case is the agency's largest civil rights case.

Goodman's mother, Carolyn, of New York City, said Monday she was glad her
son  hadn't been forgotten.

"At least I know they're working on it," she said.

Philadelphia native Dick Molpus made national headlines in 1989 when on
behalf of all Mississippians, he apologized to the families of Goodman,
Schwerner and Chaney.

On Monday, Molpus said, "I have known both Attorney General Mike Moore and
District Attorney Ken Turner for a long time. They are men of strength and
courage. I'm confident they will do their duty to enforce the law if the
passage of time has not diminished their case."

FBI spokesman Turner said his office has also assisted the attorney
general's  office in tracking down retired FBI agents who worked on the
case in the  1960s.

One of those retired agents is Joe Sullivan of New York City, who headed
the  Mississippi Burning investigation.

Back in 1964, Sullivan said FBI agents offered to let the state pursue
murder  charges, a much more serious offense. The state refused.

"I don't see any reason why the state shouldn't move forward now."

- - - - -

Grand jury examining evidence in '66 death: Klan killing one of three
    federal reinvestigations
Jerry Mitchell (Clarion-Ledger)
8 Feb 00

A former FBI agent is expected to testify today as a federal grand jury
begins to hear evidence in the Ku Klux Klan's 1966 killing of Ben Chester
White.

Former FBI agent Allen Kornblum confirmed he received a subpoena to appear
today: "I did, so I can't discuss my testimony."

The investigation of White's killing is one of three slayings from the
civil  rights era now being reinvestigated by federal authorities, who
could seek  federal murder charges in the cases since the deaths apparently
took place on  federal property.

In November, federal authorities began to reinvestigate White's killing
after  learning from ABC 20/20 producer Harry Phillips that White was
killed near  Natchez in the Homochitto National Forest.

The FBI reopened the Klan's 1964 killings of Henry Hezekiah Dee and Charles
Eddie Moore after The Clarion-Ledger reported last month that state Highway
Patrol documents showed the pair was killed in the same national forest.

Kornblum of New York City and fellow agent Robert Boyle of Memphis (now
deceased) had been investigating the 1967 bombing death of Wharlest Jackson
in Natchez when they interviewed Ernest Avants for an hour and a half on
his  front porch.

The agents testified in Avants' 1967 state murder trial that Avants told
them  Claude Fuller had shot White several times when he told Avants to
shoot  White, too. Avants said he asked Fuller where to shoot White, the
agents  testified, and Fuller said to shoot him in the head.

Jurors acquitted Avants, and Fuller was never tried. James Jones, who
accompanied the pair in the car, confessed to authorities, but jurors
couldn't agree unanimously on a verdict in his case.

What jurors in Avants' trial never heard was that Avants confessed to
prosecutors his involvement in White's killing, according to an FBI
document  obtained by The Clarion-Ledger.

Nor did jurors hear a statement Avants was quoted as giving highway
patrolmen. Using racial slurs, Avants is quoted as saying, "The only good
n----- is a dead n-----."

Two of the dozen jurors who voted Avants "not guilty" said they would have
voted "guilty" if they had been privy to this evidence they never heard.

On Jan. 9, The Clarion-Ledger reported that the FBI in a 1964 letter said
then-Adams County Sheriff Odell Anders -- who led the investigation into
the  White case -- was a Klansman.

"I went to a couple of meetings," Anders said in a telephone interview from
his home in Natchez. "All the deputies and FBI went to these meetings. As
far  as me ever being a member, I was not involved in any way."

Anders said he worked hard to convict Avants, Fuller and Jones, who were
charged with killing White, a 67-year-old black plantation caretaker. "All
three people were in the Klan, and I brought their asses to trial," the
former sheriff said. "I guarantee that."

A family member said Monday Avants, who lives in Bogue Chitto, did not wish
to comment on the new grand jury investigation.

But in a recent interview with 20/20, he hinted at what he thinks the
outcome  might be. "If I was tried now, hell, I'd be convicted."

- - - - -

Justice Department attorney observes grand jury testimony: Investigation
    into Ben White slaying drawing serious federal scutiny
Jerry Mitchell (Clarion-Ledger)
9 Feb 00

Just how seriously the Justice Department is taking Mississippi's crimes of
the past became apparent Tuesday when one of its top lawyers observed
federal  grand jury testimony in the investigation into the 1966 killing of
Ben  Chester White.

Afterwards, Paige Fitzgerald, a trial attorney for the department's civil
rights division in Washington, would not comment on her presence.

The FBI and the U.S. attorney's office are reinvestigating the killing of
White as well as the Klan's 1964 killings of Charles Eddie Moore and Henry
Hezekiah Dee. Each death is believed to have taken place on federal
property,  enabling authorities to pursue possible federal murder charges.

If successful, it would mark the first time in U.S. history for the federal
government to bring federal murder charges in a killing from the civil
rights  era.

On Tuesday, FBI agent Kevin Rust, who is investigating White's death and
the  others, and former FBI agent Allen Kornblum, who examined White's
death in  the past, appeared before the grand jury but wouldn't discuss
their testimony.

In the 1967 murder trial of Ernest Avants, Kornblum testified Avants said
he  shot White at the behest of Claude Fuller, who shot White first.

Court documents show the Klan killed White as part of a plot to lure Martin
Luther King Jr. to Natchez to kill him. White was the bait.

James Jones confessed in the case, and expressed remorse at his
involvement.  A jury couldn't agree on his verdict.

Avants' attorney argued his client shot White after he was dead. Fuller was
never tried. All but Avants have since died.

A family member said Tuesday Avants has no comment on the grand jury
investigation.

The reopening of these cases raises to 18 the number of killings in the
South  authorities have reinvestigated since 1989 when prosecutors in
Jackson  reopened the case against Byron De La Beckwith, convicted in 1994
of the 1963  murder of NAACP leader Medgar Evers.

What Mississippi has inspired -- and is now witnessing -- is unprecedented,
said David Sansing, professor emeritus of history at the University of
Mississippi. "Go back in the past. All the folks in Massachusetts never
went  back and tried to undo those witch trials. These young guys who are
doing  this, they ain't doing this but for one reason -- because it's
right."

On Aug. 21, 1998, Dennis Dahmer saw the man who ordered the Klan to kill
his  father, Vernon Sr., convicted of murder and sentenced to life. Dahmer
wept at  the sight of one-time Imperial Wizard Sam Bowers walking away in
handcuffs.

He praised efforts to bring these crimes of the past into the courtroom --
just as his father's was three decades later.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

RIGHTWING QUOTE OF THE WEEK:
For those who believe that fascism is only a thing of the past

From:       "Ward Cleaver" <WardCleaver@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date:       9 Feb 00
Newsgroups: alt.politics.white-power, et al
Subject:    Re: Loki the Leftist goes Loco

Jeez these fags are a pain in the ass aren't they?  I sure hope they
declare open season on these vermin so we can cleanse the web and the world
of the filth that plagues the planet.  I'm ready, when the call to arms
goes out I'll be there.

                           * * * * *

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is
distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and
educational purposes only.

__________________________________________________________________________

                               FASCISM:
   We have no ethical right to forgive, no historical right to forget.
      (No permission required for noncommercial reproduction)

                               - - - - -

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