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Title: Civil Liberties AP Government Unit 9


1
Civil Liberties AP Government Unit 9
2
Civil Liberties
  • Civil liberties is the name given to freedoms
    that protect the individual from government.
  • Civil liberties set limits for government so that
    it would not abuse its power and interfere with
    the lives of its citizens.
  • The term civil rights refers to rights, freedoms
    and liberties and that should be given to people
    no matter their race, ethnicity, lifestyles, or
    beliefs
  • They also can refer to the nonpolitical rights
    of a citizen or person

3
Civil Liberties
  • Many of the world's democracies, such as the
    United States and Canada, have bills of rights or
    similar constitutional documents that enumerate
    and seek to guarantee civil liberties.
  • Basic civil liberties include the
  • Freedom of assembly
  • Freedom of religion
  • Freedom of speech
  • Due process
  • The right to a fair trial and to privacy.

4
The 1st Amendment
  • Congress shall make no law respecting an
    establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
    free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom
    of speech, or of the press or the right of the
    people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
    Government for a redress of grievances.

5
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion
  • The Establishment Clause
  • There shall be no established state religion
  • The Free Exercise Clause
  • Freedom to worship as you please
  • How can these clauses be reconciled?
  • It has proven to be difficult to satisfy
    everyone!

6
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Cases
  • Reynolds v United States 1878
  • Polygamy case concerning Mormon man who married 2
    women.
  • Is this constitutional because of the Free
    Exercise Clause?
  • No!
  • Society is built upon the civil contract of
    marriage, the government can permissibly pass
    laws regulating marriage.

7
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Cases
  • West Virginia Board of Ed v Barnette 1943
  • Free Exercise Clause Case
  • Jehovahs Witness case concerning the requirement
    to pledge to the American flag
  • Did the compulsory flag-salute for public
    schoolchildren violate the First Amendment?
  • Yes, citing the Free Exercise Clause
  • The students did NOT have to leave the room or
    pledge to the flag

8
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Cases
  • Engel v Vitale 1962
  • Required nondenominational school prayer in New
    York
  • Almighty God, we acknowledge our dependence upon
    Thee, and beg Thy blessings upon us, our
    teachers, and our country."
  • Is this constitutional?
  • NO!
  • By providing the prayer, New York had officially
    approved religion this was found to violate the
    1st Amendments Establishment Clause
  • Neither the prayer's nondenominational character
    nor its voluntary character saved it from
    unconstitutionality.

9
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Cases
  • Abington School District v Schempp 1963
  • At the beginning of the school day, students who
    attended public schools in the state of
    Pennsylvania were required to read at least ten
    verses from the Bible. After completing these
    readings, school authorities required all
    Abington Township students to recite the Lord's
    Prayer.
  • The Court ruled that these required activities
    encroached on both the Free Exercise Clause and
    the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment
    since the readings and recitations were
    essentially religious ceremonies and were
    "intended by the State to be so."

10
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Case
  • Lemon v Kurtzman 1971
  • The case involved controversies over laws in
    Pennsylvania and Rhode Island.
  • In Pennsylvania, a statute provided financial
    support for teacher salaries, textbooks, and
    instructional materials for secular subjects to
    non-public schools.
  • The Rhode Island statute provided direct
    supplemental salary payments to teachers in
    non-public elementary schools. Each statute made
    aid available to "church-related educational
    institutions."

11
Importance
  • The Court ruled that public money for religious
    schools is not constitutional
  • Created The Lemon Test- A 3 Prong Test
  • First, the statute must have a secular
    legislative purpose
  • Second, its principal or primary effect must be
    one that neither advances nor inhibits religion
  • Finally, the statute must not foster "an
    excessive government entanglement with religion

12
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Cases
  • Wisconsin v Yoder 1971
  • Jonas Yoder and Wallace Miller, both members of
    the Old Order Amish religion, and Adin Yutzy, a
    member of the Conservative Amish Mennonite
    Church, were prosecuted under a Wisconsin law
    that required all children to attend public
    schools until age 16.
  • The three parents refused to send their children
    to such schools after the eighth grade, arguing
    that high school attendance was contrary to their
    religious beliefs.
  • Did Wisconsin's requirement that all parents send
    their children to school at least until age 16
    violate the First Amendment by criminalizing the
    conduct of parents who refused to send their
    children to school for religious reasons?

13
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Cases
  • Yes!
  • In a unanimous decision, the Court held that
    individual's interests in the free exercise of
    religion under the First Amendment outweighed the
    State's interests in compelling school attendance
    beyond the eighth grade.

14
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Cases
  • Employment Div., Dept. of Human Resources Oregon
    v Smith 1990
  • Free Exercise Clause Case
  • Two Native Americans who worked as counselors for
    a private drug rehabilitation organization,
    ingested peyote -- a powerful hallucinogen -- as
    part of their religious ceremonies as members of
    the Native American Church.
  • As a result of this conduct, the rehabilitation
    organization fired the counselors who sued
    claiming that the Free Exercise Clause protected
    their religion.

15
1st Amendment
  • Decision and Importance
  • The Court disagreed and ruled that an
    individual's religious beliefs do NOT excuse
    him/her from compliance with an otherwise valid
    law prohibiting conduct that government is free
    to regulate.
  • Taxes, military service, payment of taxes,
    vaccination requirements, and child-neglect laws

16
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Religion Cases
  • Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye v. Hialeah, 1993
  • The Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye practiced the
    Afro-Caribbean-based religion of Santeria.
  • Santeria used animal sacrifice as a form of
    worship in which an animal's carotid arteries
    would be cut and, except during healing and death
    rights, the animal would be eaten.
  • The city of Hialeah passed an ordinance
    prohibiting the possession of animals for
    sacrifice or slaughter soon after the church
    opened.
  • The Church challenged it claiming the Free
    Exercise Clause allowed the practice

17
Decision and Importance
  • The Court ruled for the church!
  • The core failure of the ordinances were that they
    applied exclusively to the church and singled out
    the activities of the Santeria faith and
    suppressed more religious conduct than was
    necessary to achieve their stated ends.
  • Only conduct tied to religious belief was
    burdened.
  • The ordinances targeted religious behavior,
    therefore they failed to survive the rigors of
    strict scrutiny.

18
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Speech Cases
  • Schenck v US 1919
  • During World War I, Schenck mailed circulars to
    draftees that suggested that the draft was a
    monstrous wrong motivated by the capitalist
    system.
  • The circulars urged "Do not submit to
    intimidation" but advised only peaceful action
    such as petitioning to repeal the Conscription
    Act.
  • Schenck was charged with conspiracy to violate
    the Espionage Act by attempting to cause
    insubordination in the military and to obstruct
    recruitment.
  • Were his words protected by the speech clause of
    the First Amendment?

19
1st Amendment
  • NO!
  • During wartime, utterances tolerable in peacetime
    can be punished.
  • "The question in every case is whether the words
    used are used in such circumstances and are of
    such a nature as to create a clear and present
    danger that they will bring about the substantive
    evils that Congress has a right to prevent."

20
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Speech Limits
  • Abrams v US 1919
  • The defendants threw leaflets they printed and
    threw from windows of a building.
  • One leaflet signed "revolutionists" denounced the
    sending of American troops to Russia.
  • The second leaflet denounced the war and US
    efforts to impede the Russian Revolution.
  • The defendants were charged and convicted for
    inciting resistance to the war effort and for
    urging curtailment of production of essential war
    material
  • They were sentenced to 20 years in prison and
    charged with violations of 1917 Espionage Act
  • Question of Law
  • Do the amendments to the Espionage Act or the
    application of those amendments in this case
    violate the free speech clause of the First
    Amendment?

21
1st Amendment
  • Freedom of Speech Limits
  • Decision and Importance
  • Are they inciting violence in their speech?
  • If so speech is NOT protected
  • In the majority opinion, the leaflets are an
    appeal to violent revolution, a call for a
    general strike, and an attempt to curtail
    production of munitions.
  • The leaflets had a tendency to encourage war
    resistance and to curtail war production
  • Wartime is different than peacetime
  • Is there a clear and present danger?

22
1st and 14th AmendmentIncorporation
  • Gitlow v NY 1925
  • Overturned idea in Barron v Baltimore that the
    Bill of Rights can only be applied to the federal
    government and incorporated these rights into the
    14th amendment
  • States were now prohibited from impairing
    citizens personal freedoms and Constitutional
    rights not just the federal government
  • Brought Bill of Rights under the protection of
    the 14th Amendment
  • Guaranteed due process clause of 14th Amendment

23
Incorporated or Not Incorporated?
  • The Bill of Rights is Selectively Incorporated
  • 1st Amendment Fully incorporated.
  • 2nd Amendment No Supreme Court decision on
    incorporation since 1876 (when it was rejected).
  • Heller concerning the District of Columbia did
    not incorporate
  • 3rd Amendment No Supreme Court decision 2nd
    Circuit found to be incorporated.
  • 4th Amendment Fully incorporated.
  • 5th Amendment Incorporated except for clause
    guaranteeing criminal prosecution only on a grand
    jury indictment.
  • 6th Amendment Fully incorporated.
  • 7th Amendment Not incorporated.
  • 8th Amendment Incorporated with respect to the
    protection against "cruel and unusual
    punishments," but no specific Supreme Court
    ruling on the incorporation of the "excessive
    fines" and "excessive bail" protections.

24
1st AmendmentFreedom of Expression
  • Freedom of Expression Cases
  • Tinker v Des Moines 1969
  • Does a prohibition against the wearing of
    armbands in public school, as a form of symbolic
    protest, violate the First Amendment's freedom of
    speech protections?
  • The wearing of black arm bands in schools to
    protest the Vietnam War were ruled to be a
    constitutional expression of free speech
  • Justice Brennan noted that students do not shed
    their constitutional rights to freedom of speech
    or expression at the schoolhouse gate"

25
Morse v. Frederick, 2007
  • 1) Does the First Amendment allow public schools
    to prohibit students from displaying messages
    promoting the use of illegal drugs at
    school-supervised events?
  • YES2) Does a school official have immunity from
    a damages lawsuit under when, in accordance with
    school policy, she disciplines a student for
    displaying a banner with a drug reference at a
    school-supervised event?
  • MAYBE???

26
1st AmendmentFreedom of Expression
  • Freedom of Expression Cases
  • Island Trees School District v Pico 1982
  • Does the First Amendment impose any limitations
    upon the discretion of a local school board to
    remove library books from the High School and
    Junior High School?
  • Banned book list was NOT constitutional

27
1st AmendmentFreedom of Expression
  • Freedom of Expression Cases
  • Brandenburg v Ohio 1969
  • Can KKK make a hate-speech in Ohio?
  • Incorporation of speech rights
  • Yes. The KKK speech was constitutional as long as
    violence was NOT incited (clear and present
    danger test)
  • Texas v Johnson 1989
  • A Texas law that banned flag burning was
    challenged
  • The Court ruled that flag burning as a form of
    protest was constitutional
  • Symbolic speech

28
1st AmendmentObscenity Cases
  • Are there limits to free speech?
  • Roth v United States 1957
  • Facts of the Case
  • Roth operated a book-selling business in New York
    and was convicted of mailing obscene circulars
    and an obscene book in violation of a federal
    obscenity statute.
  • Importance
  • The Court held that obscenity was not "within the
    area of constitutionally protected speech or
    press."
  • The Court noted that the First Amendment was not
    intended to protect every utterance or form of
    expression, such as materials that were
  • Utterly without redeeming social importance."

29
1st AmendmentObscenity Cases
  • However in 1972, a new Court considered the
    obscenity issue again in Miller v California
  • Miller, after conducting a mass mailing campaign
    to advertise the sale of "adult" material, was
    convicted of violating a California statute
    prohibiting the distribution of obscene material.
  • Is the sale and distribution of obscene materials
    by mail protected under the First Amendment's
    freedom of speech guarantee?

30
1st AmendmentObscenity Cases
  • Ruling and Importance
  • In a 5-to-4 decision, the Court held that obscene
    materials did not enjoy First Amendment
    protection.
  • The Court modified the test for obscenity
    established in Roth v. United States
  • The Court rejected the "utterly without redeeming
    social value" ruling from Roth.
  • The new standard became
  • Does it have artistic, literary, political,
    scientific value or social importance?
  • Also "community standards" must be taken in to
    account

31
1st AmendmentFreedom of Press
  • Near v Minnesota, 1930
  • Jay Near published a scandal sheet in
    Minneapolis, in which he attacked local
    officials, charging that they were implicated
    with gangsters
  • Minnesota officials stopped Near from publishing
    his newspaper under a state law that allowed such
    action against periodicals.
  • The law provided that any person publishing a
    "malicious, scandalous and defamatory" newspaper
    was guilty of a nuisance, and could be stopped
    from further committing or maintaining the
    nuisance.
  • The Court sided with Near claiming No prior
    restraint of press

32
1st Amendment Freedom of Press
  • Hazelwood v Kuhlmeier, 1988
  • The Spectrum, the school-sponsored newspaper of
    Hazelwood East High School, was written and
    edited by students. The school principal found
    two of the articles in the issue to be
    inappropriate, and ordered that the pages on
    which the articles appeared be withheld from
    publication.
  • Cathy Kuhlmeier and two other former Hazelwood
    East students brought the case to court.
  • Did the principal's deletion of the articles
    violate the students' rights under the First
    Amendment?

33
1st Amendment Freedom of Press
  • No!
  • In a 5-to-3 decision, the Court held that the
    First Amendment did not require schools to
    affirmatively promote particular types of student
    speech.
  • School newspapers may be regulated by school
    officials

34
1st Amendment Freedom of Press
  • New York Times v Sullivan, 1964
  • Sullivan claimed he had been harmed by an ad
  • The Court held that the First Amendment protects
    the publication of all statements, even false
    ones, about the conduct of public officials
    except when statements are made with actual
    malice
  • New York Times v US , 1971
  • Vietnam war/President Nixon case
  • Pentagon Papers could be published

35
1st Amendment Freedom of Press
  • Other Important Laws and Acts dealing with the
    Freedom of the Press
  • Sunshine Laws
  • Freedom of Information Act

36
1st Amendment
  • Right to Privacy Cases
  • Griswold v Connecticut 1965
  • Facts
  • Griswold was the Executive Director of the
    Planned Parenthood League of Connecticut. Both
    she gave information, instruction, and other
    medical advice to married couples concerning
    birth control. Griswold and her colleague were
    convicted under a Connecticut law which
    criminalized the provision of counseling for
    purposes of preventing conception.
  • Conclusion
  • Birth control for married couples was
    constitutional
  • The First, Third, Fourth, and Ninth Amendments,
    create a new constitutional right, the right to
    privacy in marital relations
  • Roe v Wade 1973
  • Abortion was constitutional- right to privacy

37
1st Amendment
  • Right to Privacy Cases
  • Webster v Reproductive Health Services, 1989
  • Facts-Abortion clinics could limit abortions to
    before 20 weeks in Missouri
  • Conclusion-Affirmation of Roe but a roll back of
    Roe and privacy rights
  • Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 1992
  • Facts-Pennsylvania case in which a 24 hour
    waiting period, and a law requiring parental
    permission were upheld
  • Conclusion-An affirmation of Roe but another
    rollback of Roe

38
2nd Amendment
  • A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the
    security of a free State, the right of the people
    to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
  • Important Case
  • District of Columbia v. Heller (2008)

39
4th Amendment
  • The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
    probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation,
    and particularly describing the place to be
    searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

40
4th Amendment
  • Mapp v Ohio 1961
  • Dolree Mapp was convicted of possessing obscene
    materials after an admittedly illegal police
    search of her home for a fugitive. She appealed
    her conviction on the basis of freedom of
    expression.
  • Search and seizure case
  • Search of home by police found illegal materials
    without warrant
  • Is this constitutional?

41
4th Amendment
  • Search and Seizure Cases
  • No! The Court ruled for Mrs. Mapp
  • The Exclusionary Rule was established
  • Without warrant, items could not be used against
    Mapp
  • This is known as the Fruit of a poisonous tree
  • FYI, if police are in hot pursuit of criminals
    they can be given the good faith exception in
    most cases

42
4th Amendment
  • Katz v US, 1968
  • Katz ran an illegal gambling operation
  • Acting on a suspicion that Katz was transmitting
    gambling information over the phone to clients in
    other states, federal agents attached an
    eavesdropping device to the outside of a public
    phone booth used by Katz
  • Was this wiretapping constitutional?
  • No!
  • Wiretaps need a court order or search warrant
  • 4th Amendment protects people not places

43
4th Amendment
  • Safford Unified School District v. Redding
    (2009)
  • Savana Redding, an eighth grader at Safford
    Middle School, was strip-searched by school
    officials on the basis of a tip that she might
    have ibuprofen on her person in violation of
    school policy.
  • She alleged her Fourth Amendment right to be free
    of unreasonable search and seizure was violated.

44
4th Amendment
  • Question of Law
  • Question 1 Does the Fourth Amendment prohibit
    school officials from strip searching students
    suspected of possessing drugs in violation of
    school policy?
  • Question 2 Are school officials individually
    liable for damages in a lawsuit filed under 42
    U.S.C Section 1983?
  • Conclusion
  • Question 1 Sometimes, but in this case no!
  • Question 2 No!

45
5th Amendment
  • No person shall be held to answer for a capital,
    or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a
    presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except
    in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or
    in the Militia, when in actual service in time of
    War or public danger nor shall any person be
    subject for the same offence to be twice put in
    jeopardy of life or limb nor shall be compelled
    in any criminal case to be a witness against
    himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or
    property, without due process of law nor shall
    private property be taken for public use, without
    just compensation.

46
Due Process Rights found in 5th Amendment
  • Substantive due process rights are the rights
    that you have when you wake up in the morning as
    an American citizen
  • Amendment 1 freedom of speech, religion,
    expression, etc.
  • Also, Amendments 2 and 3.
  • Procedural due process rights are the rights that
    you have when you have entered the legal system -
    freedom from unreasonable search, right to an
    attorney, jury trial, freedom from cruel and
    unusual punishment etc.
  • Also refers to the "process liberties" the
    government must adhere to when accusing an
    American of committing a crime

47
Due Process Rights
  • Examples of Procedural Due Process Rights
  • Speedy trial
  • Legal counsel assistance
  • Police strip searches
  • Police have to have a warrant
  • Examples of Substantive Due Process Rights
  • Minimum wage law
  • Possession of marijuana for medical purposes
  • Burning the flag

48
5th Amendment Eminent DomainKelo v City of New
London, CT, 2005
  • Facts of the Case
  • New London, a city in Connecticut, used its
    eminent domain authority to seize private
    property to sell to private developers.
  • The city said developing the land would create
    jobs and increase tax revenues.
  • The property owners argued the city violated the
    Fifth Amendment's takings clause, which
    guaranteed the government will not take private
    property for public use without just
    compensation.
  • Specifically the property owners argued taking
    private property to sell to private developers
    was not public use.
  • Question
  • Does a city violate the Fifth Amendment's takings
    clause if the city takes private property and
    sells it for private development, with the hopes
    the development will help the city's bad economy?

49
Importance of Kelo
  • Conclusion
  • No. In a 5-4 opinion delivered by Justice John
    Paul Stevens, the majority held that the city's
    taking of private property to sell for private
    development qualified as a "public use" within
    the meaning of the takings clause.
  • The city was not taking the land simply to
    benefit a certain group of private individuals,
    but was following an economic development plan.
  • The takings here qualified as "public use"
    despite the fact that the land was not going to
    be used by the public.
  • The Fifth Amendment did not require "literal"
    public use, the majority said, but the "broader
    and more natural interpretation of public use as
    'public purpose.'"

50
6th Amendment
  • In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall
    enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by
    an impartial jury of the State and district
    wherein the crime shall have been committed,
    which district shall have been previously
    ascertained by law, and to be informed of the
    nature and cause of the accusation to be
    confronted with the witnesses against him to
    have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses
    in his favor, and to have the Assistance of
    Counsel for his defense.

51
5th and 6th Amendments Fair Trial/Due Process
Case
  • Sheppard v Maxwell (1966)
  • After suffering a trial court conviction of
    second-degree murder for the bludgeoning death of
    his pregnant wife, Samuel Sheppard challenged the
    verdict as the product of an unfair trial.
  • The case received extensive coverage by the
    press, with headlines such as "Why isn't Sam
    Sheppard in jail?" and "Getting away with murder"
    covering the front pages of newspapers.
  • Sheppard alleged that the trial judge failed to
    protect him from the massive, widespread, and
    prejudicial publicity that attended his
    prosecution.
  • Was there too much pre-trial publicity for
    Sheppard to receive a fair trial?.

52
5th and 6th Amendments Fair Trial/Due Process
Case
  • Yes!
  • In an 8-to-1 decision the Court found that
    Sheppard did not receive a fair trial.
  • Noting that although freedom of expression should
    be given great latitude, the Court held that it
    must not be so broad as to divert the trial away
    from its primary purpose adjudicating both
    criminal and civil matters in an objective, calm,
    and solemn courtroom setting.
  • FYIAt his second trial, 12 years after the
    first, Sheppard was acquitted. ?

53
5th and 6th Amendments
  • Attorney Rights/Due Process Cases
  • Gideon v Wainwright 1963
  • Right to an attorney
  • Escobedo v Illinois 1964
  • Right to speak to an attorney
  • Miranda v Arizona 1966
  • Miranda rights must be read

54
8th Amendment
  • Excessive bail shall not be required, nor
    excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual
    punishments inflicted.

55
8th Amendment
  • Is the death penalty cruel and unusual
    punishment?
  • Furman v Georgia, 1972
  • Gregg v Georgia, 1976

56
Furman v Georgia, 1972
  • Facts of the Case
  • Furman was burglarizing a private home when a
    family member discovered him.
  • He attempted to flee, and in doing so tripped and
    fell.
  • The gun that he was carrying went off and killed
    a resident of the home.
  • He was convicted of murder and sentenced to
    death.
  • Question
  • Does the imposition and carrying out of the death
    penalty in these cases constitute cruel and
    unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth and
    Fourteenth Amendments?

57
Importance
  • Conclusion
  • Yes. The imposition of the death penalty in this
    cases constituted cruel and unusual punishment
    and violated the Constitution.
  • The Court's decision forced states and the
    national legislature to rethink their statutes
    for capital offenses to assure that the death
    penalty would not be administered in a capricious
    or discriminatory manner.

58
Gregg v Georgia, 1976
  • Facts of the Case
  • A jury found Gregg guilty of armed robbery and
    murder and sentenced him to death.
  • On appeal, the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed the
    death sentence except as to its imposition for
    the robbery conviction.
  • Gregg challenged his remaining death sentence for
    murder, claiming that his capital sentence was a
    "cruel and unusual" punishment that violated the
    Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
  • Question
  • Is the imposition of the death sentence
    prohibited under the Eighth and Fourteenth
    Amendments as "cruel and unusual" punishment?

59
Gregg v Georgia
  • Conclusion
  • No. In a 7-to-2 decision, the Court held that a
    punishment of death did not violate the Eighth
    and Fourteenth Amendments under all
    circumstances.
  • In extreme criminal cases, such as when a
    defendant has been convicted of deliberately
    killing another, the careful and judicious use of
    the death penalty may be appropriate if carefully
    employed.
  • Moreover, the Court was not prepared to overrule
    the Georgia legislature's finding that capital
    punishment serves as a useful deterrent to future
    capital crimes and an appropriate means of social
    retribution against its most serious offenders.

60
  • Please read
  • Chapter 5
  • and study your case file and notes!!!
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