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The Power of the Paedos - another high profile case hits the 'never happened' wall?
Yes, very prescient of you David. It seems so obvious doesn't it? They wait until they are safely dead or soon to be before there is any half hearted action. We see also the media cover up because of their own separate corruption that they find useful to keep and use as needed. I still live in hope that there will be one time which cut's through the Gordian knot of lies and cover ups and exposes it all.
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
The Met Police Professional Standards Detectives have combined a series of investigations into decades of alleged cover-ups and failure to investigate child sex abuse by VIPs into one umbrella operation called Operation Winter Key. It remains to be seen if any thing will come of it and may later come to be called :

Operation Burn and Shred


Operation We Found No Evidence of Systematic Corruption


Operation It was a Silly Conspiracy Theory


Operation You Thought We Were Seriously Going to Investigate Our Own?


Operation Without Fear Or Favour HaHaHaHaHaHa
Quote:

Revealed: huge probe into cover-ups' over VIP paedophiles

Operation Winter Key' brings together claims of old police cases dropped corruptly'

By Tim Wood | 21 April 2016

Pic: KF Catles

[Image: New-Scotland-Yard-6_1.jpg?itok=rMwhoa6G]Cold cases: overarching investigation



People are coming forward to say that they told the police about this, but they did nothing about it.


Source close to Operation Winter Key'


Detectives have combined a series of investigations into alleged cover-ups of child sex abuse by VIPs into one umbrella operation.

Exaro can reveal that allegations about how Scotland Yard "corruptly" dropped old cases on claims against celebrities such as Sir Jimmy Savile, the paedophile and BBC star, politicians and other prominent people are being investigated under Operation Winter Key'.
Sources familiar with the operation say that it covers all claims of "impropriety" by officers of the Metropolitan Police Service over complaints of sexual abuse up to 2012.

One source told Exaro: "It is being treated very seriously."
Detectives from the Met's directorate of professional standards (PSD) are working on the expanding operation, which is being overseen by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC).
As Exaro revealed in January, the IPCC is directly investigating similar allegations against a senior Met detective in more recent years.
A source close to the operation said: "The reason for the cut-off at 2012 is that it would be unethical for PSD officers to look at other officers still in the Met. It is too sensitive for everyone at the moment for these issues to be left unresolved."
A second source said: "Every day, people are reporting abuse that happened to them in the past and saying that they told the police at the time, or their social worker, nurse, or teacher. Things were very different back in the day. It is not perfect now. But the Met is trying to deal with this."
"People are coming forward to say that they told the police about this, but they did nothing about it, or the officers dealing with it were suddenly told to stop investigating this."
Operation Winter Key is investigating whether, as some former officers allege, orders to close cases prematurely came from senior management. It is taking evidence from several current and former officers.
One element of the operation is investigating complaints that police failed to treat allegations specifically against Savile properly.
The second source added: "Forces all round the country are carrying out similar investigations, seeing whether there is any evidence of misconduct at a much higher level."
When the Met last month announced the closure of Operation Midland', the investigation into allegations of child sex abuse and the murder of three boys by members of the Westminster paedophile network, it said that the PSD was continuing to look into historical allegations from former officers about concerns over sexual abuse that involved "political figures" and were not properly examined. The IPCC was managing 32 such investigations.
A spokesman for the Met said that all its investigations into allegations of child sex abuse by prominent people, liaising with the overarching inquiry into child sex abuse, as well as "impropriety by officers", have been brought together under Operation Winter Key. It has a 90-strong team.
The investigations into shelved operations were launched after Exaro revealed in December 2014 how several former police officers admitted in a private online forum that paedophile cases by Scotland Yard were closed down as they started to expose VIPs.
Exaro published incendiary posts from the closed online forum for serving and former officers.
A week later, Exaro revealed that former police officers who made the revealing postings had decided to submit a dossier of statements to the Met's commissioner, Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe.
And there were yet more revealing posts, including recollections of one surveillance operation on paedophiles that was shelved after it tracked police officers, lawyers and even a magistrate.
Three months later, the IPCC announced an initial wave of investigations into "allegations of corruption in the Metropolitan Police Service in relation to child sex offences dating from the 1970's to the 2000's."
The IPCC said in a statement that all the cases concerned allegations of "suppressing evidence, hindering or halting investigations, and covering up the offences because of the involvement of MPs and police officers."
It also announced a similar investigation in relation to Greater Manchester Police and the late Sir Cyril Smith, the former Liberal MP who died in 2010.
And last September, the IPCC announced a further tranche of similar investigations. The police appealed for anyone with any relevant information about such historical cases to come forward.
If you have information that might help our investigation, please contact us. Keep re-visiting Exaro for more on this investigation.
LIST OF PREVIOUS RELEVANT PIECES: Child sex abuse, Fernbridge' and Fairbank': Exaro story thread
http://www.exaronews.com/articles/5815/r...aedophiles
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
I have decided to name the real paedophile movers and shakers as the Westminster Protection Society of Paedophiles (WPSP) who can be sensed as the guiding mind behind all sorts of present and past judicial and other enquiries into organized paedophile activity in the UK. Their aim is to keep different paedophile events that break into the public as separate and individual - and at all costs to hinder and restrict any public knowledge of how widespread and controlled (from the centre) vile paedophile activity ion the UK actually is.

There is also the black ail aspect to this where VIP's such as MP's and government ministers can be - and are - blackmailed... presumably to keep the elite's control over the democratic and accountability (police and judicial) process ticking comfortably over and to ensure the game of shadows continues unabated. Which is just a long-winded way of saying the ship of state has to be kept on course no matter what.

From Paddy French blog

Quote:

THE MACUR REVIEW Part One: BLOODY WHITEWASH

[Image: macur_series_head_1.png?w=450]

THE REPORT of the Macur Review an examination of the work of the 1996-99 North Wales Child Abuse Tribunal is a whitewash.
Lady Justice Macur's report was finally published on March 17 this year nearly three and a half years after it was commissioned.
She concludes:
"I have found no reason to undermine the conclusions of the Tribunal in respect of the nature and scale of the abuse."
She brushes aside evidence submitted by Rebecca one of the Tribunal's major critics.
She also rules out the existence of a national paedophile ring:
"Neither is there evidence of the involvement of nationally prominent individuals in the abuse of children in care in North Wales, between 1974 and 1996."
"Consequently, I do not recommend the establishment of a further public or private inquiry."
But Lady Justice Macur is also highly critical of the Tribunal.
Her team has done enough digging to find shocking shortcomings in its work.
She could have condemned it as unfit for purpose.
There's a precedent for this.
[Image: macur_lj1.png?w=437&h=583]LADY JUSTICE MACUR
NINE MONTHS after she agreed to chair the Review, Julia Macur was promoted to the Court of Appeal one of 42 senior judges who gain a knighthood (or its equivalent) and a seat on the Privy Council.
The first Bloody Sunday Tribunal chaired by Lord Widgery largely cleared British soldiers of killing 13 civilians during a demonstration in Derry in 1972.
The Widgery Report was widely branded a whitewash.
A second, more thorough Tribunal the £200 million Saville Inquiry finally ruled in 2010 that paratroopers "lost control" and killed people "none of whom was posing a threat …"
The Macur Review didn't take this route, choosing to whitewash the North Wales Child Abuse Tribunal.
But it's still a bloody whitewash.
Lady Justice Macur delivers devastating blows to the reputation of Tribunal chairman, Sir Ronald Waterhouse.
One of her judgments concerns Waterhouse's handling of a witness who gave tainted evidence' before him.
The Welsh Office became aware the witness wasn't telling the truth and was so concerned it asked a barrister to look at what happened.
The barrister recommended an inquiry.
But when the Welsh Office sent the barrister's opinion to Sir Ronald, he ignored it.
He didn't even mention the allegation in his report.
Lady Justice Macur finds his response "surprising".
She could easily have said it was "shocking" and "unforgiveable".
Sir Ronald's decision to reject a public register of freemasons involved in the Tribunal was made, she concludes:
" … with inadequate, if any, consideration of public perception in this regard, nor the possible adverse implications upon the integrity of any findings made by the Tribunal in relation to freemasonry."
Lady Justice Macur is saying, in effect, that Waterhouse was contemptuous of public concern about the issue.
[Image: 028_waterhouse1-2.jpg?w=842&h=474]SIR RONALD WATERHOUSE
THE RETIRED High Court judge, who died in 2011, showed a "a lack of due diligence in a matter of clear public interest" when he refused to establish a register of freemasons.
The Macur Review also reveals that masonic infiltration of the Tribunal was far greater than previously suspected.
But one of the Review's most important revelations that North Wales Police withheld dramatic new information from the Tribunal cannot be reported for legal reasons.
Lady Justice Macur ends her foreword with the words:
"I hope that this Report may bring a conclusion to the question mark raised against the Tribunal …"
It doesn't it succeeds only in adding new ones …
♦♦♦
THE MACUR Review was set up in dramatic circumstances.
On 2 November 2012 the BBC Newsnight programme carried an interview with Stephen Messham, a child abuse victim from North Wales.
Messham claimed that an unnamed senior Tory politician later revealed to be Lord McAlpine had abused him while he was in care at the Bryn Estyn children's home near Wrexham.
The broadcast, coming a month after the shocking ITV programme outing Sir Jimmy Savile as a sexual predator at the heart of the British establishment, was electrifying.
Three days later, on Bonfire Night, David Cameron announced two new inquiries.
One was a new police investigation into historic child abuse allegations Operation Pallial.
The second was a judge-led investigation the Macur Review into the work of the North Wales Child Abuse Tribunal which sat between 1996 and 1999.
Rebecca has been a long-standing critic of the inquiry Britain's only child abuse Tribunal with a long series of articles called The Case Of The Flawed Tribunal published in 2010.
The most important of these Silent Witness concerned a former care home executive who was not called by the Tribunal.
He claimed to have alerted police to allegations of abuse more than a decade before a major North Wales Police inquiry began.
[Image: messham.jpg?w=842&h=660]STEPHEN MESSHAM
THE CHILD abuse victim was photographed with the Waterhouse Report when it was published in 2000. Twelve years later he triggered two major inquiries when he claimed Lord McAlpine had abused him at the Bryn Estyn children's home. By the time he realised it was a case of mistaken identity, it was too late to stop the investigations …
In October 2011 just a few months before the Newsnight programme editor Paddy French wrote to then Welsh secretary Cheryl Gillan asking her to "appoint a suitably independent barrister to examine the Rebeccaallegations".
Gillan never replied.
The day after the Prime Minister announced the new inquiries, Home Secretary Theresa May made a statement to the House of Commons about the police investigation.
In the debate that followed, Paul Flynn MP (Newport West) raised the Rebecca articles:
"I ask the right hon. Lady to look not only at the fresh evidence but at the evidence that was available at the time and that was almost certainly suppressed by powerful people."
"Will she look at the evidence produced by Paddy French and the Rebecca website …"
Home Secretary May replied:
"The police investigations will look at the evidence that was available at the time in these historical abuse allegations, and at whether the evidence was properly investigated and whether avenues of inquiry were not pursued that should have been followed up and that could have led to prosecutions"
"I can therefore say to the hon. Gentleman that the police will, indeed, be looking at that historical evidence. That is part of the job they will be doing."
That debate took place on Tuesday.
But by Friday Stephen Messham had retracted his allegation:
"After seeing a picture of the individual [McAlpine] in the past hour," he said, "this [is] not the person I identified by a photograph presented to me by the police in the early 1990s, who told me the man in the photograph was Lord McAlpine."
By then it was too late to stop Operation Pallial.
And the Review of the North Wales Child Abuse Tribunal was also under way …

♦♦♦

FOR MORE than two years Rebecca co-operated with the Macur Review.
After a first statement was submitted in January 2013, Lady Justice Macur asked for a meeting with editor Paddy French.
This took place at the Royal Courts of Justice in London in March 2013.
By that time a second statement had been delivered.
A third statement was submitted in July 2013.
But things began to go wrong in the autumn of 2013.
A fourth statement could not be completed because access to the transcripts of the public hearings of the Tribunal in 1997-98 was denied.
These had been made available to Rebecca when it was preparing the 2010 series The Case Of The Flawed Tribunal.
Many of these articles could not have been written without access to the transcripts.
In September 2013 Rebecca wrote to then Welsh Secretary David Jones asking for a full set.
His spokesman said:
"Access to material is solely the responsibility of the independent Macur Review."
[Image: tribunal_001-e1425846935818.jpg?w=842&h=466]CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS
WHEN THE Waterhouse Tribunal was sitting in 1996 and 1997, its hearings were open to the public and daily transcripts were available. In recent years, however, both the Wales Office and the Macur Review have denied Rebecca access to them …
Lady Justice Macur refused to provide them.
A spokeswoman said:
" … it would be inappropriate to provide the transcripts because she wants to hear your perspectives based on your recollections so as to preserve the integrity of your submissions."
In October 2013 Paddy French wrote to Lady Justice Macur to express "a sense of concern" at her decision.
He said that he given her "everything that relates to my personal recollection" and concluded:
"Without the transcripts I don't feel able to make a further statement."
Lady Justice Macur was unmoved, access to the transcripts was denied and the statement was never completed.
By this time, Rebecca was also becoming concerned at the length of time the review was taking.
An official said there were "no imminent plans to submit our report …"
In February 2015, more than two years after the Review started work, Paddy French wrote to Lady Justice Macur:
"I am considering withdrawing from the Review."
"The passage of time has seriously eroded my confidence in the process."
"It's clear to me that the Review will not be complete by the election and, by the time the new administration is in place and able to take a decision, we will be into the autumn."
An official replied:
"Lady Justice Macur has seen your email … and noted its contents."
Rebecca by now suspecting the Review would be a whitewash withdrew.
Paddy French asked the judge to remove his statements from her report and to "include my reasons for doing so in the Review's report …"
The Review replied:
"The judge has asked me to let you know that she has found no reason to refer to your submissions specifically in her report and therefore it will not be necessary for her to indicate why she has removed them."
In March 2015, Rebecca also wrote to Home Secretary Theresa May to express "concerns about the delay in the completion of the Macur Review …"
The letter pointed out that the review which the judge had initially promised would "be thorough and expeditious" had already taken 26 months.
This compared to the 39 months of the original Tribunal, an "enormous undertaking" costing £14 million.
Lord Leveson's three volume report into press ethics was published in just 17 months.
[Image: leveson.jpg?w=842]LEVESON FAST, MACUR SLOW
LORD LEVESON'S inquiry into the culture, practices and ethics of the press was similar to the Macur Review. Both had parallel police investigations to deal with but Lord Justice Leveson was swift compared to Lady Justice Macur.
Paddy French added:
"I am also concerned that the Review may have already made up its mind, concluding that the Waterhouse Tribunal was broadly sound."
When the Macur Review was finally published, in March this year, it had taken 38 months just one month less than the Tribunal it was examining.
And it proved to be the whitewash that was feared.

♦♦♦

THE MACUR Review is a classic example of the "long grass" theory of handling a political crisis.
As former Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson put it:
" … it's that classic leadership trick, which a number of us pull when we are in deep difficulty, to say this is disgraceful and we must have an inquiry."
The idea is to launch an inquiry which takes so long to report that the reason for its existence is long-forgotten.
This is precisely what has happened to the Macur Review.
The Welsh media only carried its findings.
(BBC Wales said the inquiry took two years when it was closer to four.)
No London-based newspaper reported the conclusions and even Private Eye, which has a long-standing historical interest in the story, was silent.
This means the Rebecca analysis is likely to form the only serious examination of the Review.
The second article The £3m Whitewash to be published tomorrow examines how the Macur Review handled our key complaint against the Tribunal.
The Tribunal had cleared North Wales Police of failing to investigate abuse allegations in the 1970s and 1980s:
"there was no significant omission by the North Wales Police in investigating the complaints of abuse to children in care."
[Image: dsc_0592-2.jpg?w=485&h=323]NORTH WALES POLICE
ALLEGATIONS THAT the force covered up allegations of child abuse in the 1970s and 1980s were one of the reasons the Waterhouse Tribunal was set up. The Tribunal cleared the police of any blame but the rumours continued …
But the Tribunal did not hear the testimony of a care home executive who claimed he reported a major abuser to the police more than a decade before he was arrested.
The third article looks at the Review's damning indictment of the way Tribunal handled freemasonry.
The fourth piece examines some of the new material thrown up in the course of the review.
This includes an extraordinary claim by former Welsh Secretary of State, David Jones, that a member of the Tribunal staff rang him before the Waterhouse report was published.
The official told him that former Chester Tory MP Sir Peter Morrison, Margaret Thatcher's private parliamentary secretary, would be named in its report.
Lady Justice Macur notes that Morrison's name is not mentioned in the Waterhouse and decides the phone call was probably a "hoax".
The final article dealing with sensational new material concerning North Wales Police cannot be released at this time for legal reasons.
It's likely to be published towards the end of this year or the beginning of 2017.

♦♦♦

NOTES
1
The full report of the Macur Review can be found here.
2
There's more detail on the main Rebecca criticism of the Waterhouse Tribunal in the article Silent Witness. A TV programme, A Touch Of Frost, was withdrawn after ITV refused to allow its copyright material to be used. However, ITV Wales later broadcast an edition of its Wales This Week strand which carries most of this footage. To see click it, on Still Lost In Care.
3
The story of how Rebecca came to withdraw from the Macur Review is told in the piece The Macur Review A Loss Of Confidence.
♦♦♦
Published: 9 May 2016
[B]© Rebecca Television[/B]
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
Reply
Establishment cover-up, Vicar? Or do you take biscuits with your tea?

The 3rd Judge in a row resigns from the Westminster paedo inquiry - the poisoned chalice claims another victim.

whoops, there goes another one...



Quote:

New Zealand judge who is paid £500,000 a year to lead Britain's child abuse inquiry spent THREE months out of the country in her first year on the job

  • New Zealand high court judge drafted in to head UK child abuse inquiry
  • It emerged today she spent more than two months abroad or on holiday
  • Inquiry spokesman has insisted she is 'on call' even when she is overseas
By RICHARD SPILLETT FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 07:58, 4 August 2016 | UPDATED: 02:49, 5 August 2016
26shares
6View comments

The judge leading a wide-ranging inquiry into child abuse in the UK spent more than 70 days of her first year in the role abroad or on holiday.
Dame Lowell Goddard, a New Zealand high court judge, was appointed to lead the inquiry following the resignation of two previous chairwomen.
It was reported today that, during her first 12 months in the £500,000-a-year role, she spent 44 working days abroad and 30 days on annual leave.
Scroll down for video
[Image: iXL9qfU4940661f445c4630be37-3722700-Dame...738088.jpg]

+2



Dame Lowell Goddard spent 70 days abroad during her first year heading an abuse inquiry


The inquiry was set up in 2014 amid claims of an establishment cover-up following allegations that a paedophile ring operated in Westminster in the 1980s.

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An inquiry spokesman told The Times: 'The chair spent 44 working days in New Zealand and Australia on inquiry business in the first financial year of the inquiry. In addition she is entitled to 30 days' annual leave.
'We do not comment on where people working for the inquiry spend their annual leave. The chair is always on call and in direct contact with the inquiry team.'
[Image: 0DEC981E00000514-3722700-image-a-3_1470294756699.jpg]

+2



A spokesman for her inquiry insisted she is always on call even when working abroad

The inquiry has been beset by delays and controversies since it was first announced by the then home secretary Theresa May.
Baroness Butler-Sloss, stood down in July 2014 amid questions over the role played by her late brother, Lord Havers, who was attorney general in the 1980s.
Her replacement Dame Fiona Woolf resigned following a barrage of criticism over her 'establishment links', most notably in relation to former home secretary Leon Brittan, who died in 2015.
Mrs May officially reconstituted the probe under Justice Goddard in March 2015 and placed it on a statutory footing, meaning it has the power to compel witnesses to give evidence.
The inquiry's terms of reference say that its purpose includes considering 'the extent to which state and non-state institutions have failed in their duty of care to protect children from sexual abuse and exploitation'. It covers England and Wales.


Source

PS, Theresa May appointed all three. The first two resigned when it became clear they should have recused themselves due to personal involvement with potential defendants (who contracted rigor mortis).
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
Reply
Quote:PS, Theresa May appointed all three. The first two resigned when it became clear they should have recused themselves due to personal involvement with potential defendants (who contracted rigor mortis).

You can get a lot done on the beach getting massages from the cabana boys you know.
"We'll know our disinformation campaign is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --William J. Casey, D.C.I

"We will lead every revolution against us." --Theodore Herzl
Reply
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
Reply
Oh, my. Oh, May.
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
https://www.reddit.com/r/The_Donald/comm...the_laura/


The finders had a duplex apartment just down the road from the Pizza place talked about in the above thread...

https://deeppoliticsforum.com/forums/sho...he-Finders
Reply
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CwtOL60XgAAKcl-.jpg:large

:Blink::Blink:
Reply
The never ending story of the British Establishment paedophile government inquiry where to date (including today) a total of 3 appointed have resigned (2 due to unstated conflicts of interest) and one due to in-fighting with the civil servants she was given and wouldn't cooperate - and now the 5th senior barrister has resigned.

The subject is horribly mired in filth and is of such importance to the state that it seems the whole truth will not be permitted to come out - no matter what the political cost (because the cost of it coming out would be infinitely worse, I think)

Quote:Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse: another resignation

Posted on 16 November 2016 by Frank Cranmer
Late on Tuesday, the BBC reported that Professor Aileen McColgan, a barrister and Professor of Law at King's College, London, who was leading IICSA's investigations into the Anglican and Roman Catholic Churches, had resigned. Professor McColgan declined to comment.The BBC provided a list of those counsel who had resigned:

  • Hugh Davies QC deputy counsel to the inquiry (December 2015)
  • Toby Fisher joint first junior counsel to the inquiry (August 2015)
  • Elizabeth Prochaska joint first junior counsel to the inquiry (September 2016)
  • Ben Emmerson QC lead counsel on the inquiry (September 2016)
  • Aileen McColgan lead counsel on inquiry investigations into the Anglican and Roman Catholic Churches (November 2016).
Yvette Cooper MP, who chairs the Commons Home Affairs Committee, was quoted as saying that what went wrong must be made clear, adding: "This has got to be about getting it back on track for the survivors of child abuse because they really need to know that this inquiry's going to be effective."
Source

See also today's BBC report HERE.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
Reply


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