Isabella: Katrina's sad legacy
nd cats through spay-neuter programs.
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« July 2006 | Main | September 2006 » August 30, 2006Isabella: Katrina's sad legacy-
She is the face of Katrina's lost animals, one year after the hurricane struck and devastated the Gulf Coast.
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Isabella, all of 4 months old, was either born or abandoned on the streets of New Orleans.
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Suffering from mange that was irritated by the pile of fiberglass that she used for a bed, she is all but hairless. Her bleeding skin is as cracked as a lunar suface, her extremities are swollen, and her pasterns are weakened from malnutrition. Any attempt to sit or lie down is excruciatingly painful for her.
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"When the FEMA workers first saw her, they ran to their trucks to find any food they had to give her. It took them a couple days to get her to trust them enough to grab her," says Kim Johnson, an animal rescue volunteer from Tualatin, Ore., who learned about Isabella and circulated her photos on the Internet. " When she realized they didn't mean to do her any harm, all she wanted was love."
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Isabella was eventually caught by the FEMA workers last week and taken to the Southern Animal Foundation (www.southernanimalfoundation.org), a non-profit animal hospital in New Orleans, where she is being treated. The web site has a donation button for those who want to contribute to Isabella's rehabilitation, as well as their overall mission of reducing the city's population of stray dogs a
nd cats through spay-neuter programs.-
But Isabella is only one sad story amid a sea of heartbreak. One year after Katrina blighted the Gulf Coast and stranded an estimated 50,000 companion animals, many of those that survived and evaded capture are now feral, with only the streets to call home.
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Because many of them were never spayed or neutered, they are breeding, bringing into the word a new generation of puppies and kittens that know only asphalt and glass shards instead of comfy dog beds and squeaky toys.
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Kim says friends who have visited New Orleans recently report seeing animals frequently in the Lower 9th Ward --which is not as innocuous as it sounds.
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"At this point, most of these animals hide during the day and only come out at night, because they're reverting to feral behavior," Kim explains. " So seeing so many animals in broad daylight, especially when it's so hot out, is a testament to just how many animals are out there, and how hungry they are."
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During this week of intense Katrina coverage, Kim asks us to remember Katrina's voiceless victims.
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"The photos of Isabella would break your heart no matter when you saw them, but ... this is the condition of some of the thousands of animals that are still on the streets a year after Katrina, and ... the media hasn't even mentioned the ongoing animal situation,"says Kim, who made three trips to New Orleans after the hurricane to help with animal rescue. "... The animal situation has never stopped being a Katrina disaster, and the animals are still out there suffering, starving, breeding, and dying every day."
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Photos courtesy of Deanna Theiss.
August 29, 2006Goin, Goin ... gonePet detective Karin Goin called today to say she will not be coming to search for Vivi after all. Goin, who was conducting a seminar for aspiring pet detectives in upstate New York, had planned to drive down to New York City today. But a stress-related illness that was affecting three of her dogs prompted a trip to an emergency vet. He advised Goin to return home to Oklahoma and cancel all work for the next couple of weeks to allow the dogs to rest. August 28, 2006Calling King Solomon: Katrina custody battlesTugs of war over pets One year after Katrina, survivors sue to bring home rescued animals adopted by others BY DENISE FLAIM Linda Charles had no idea just how fitting her German shepherd's name would become. Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc. Photos: Austin American-Statesman; Steve Nesius; Best Friends Society; J. Conrad Williams, Newsday. Vivi weekend recapVivi searchers were out in force this weekend, including Rick Patterson, the fiancee of Vivi ci-owner Jil Watson, fresh from California; greyhound recovery expert Michael McCann of Massachusetts; and detection-dog handler Laura Totis, who had searched for Vivi before in other neighborhoods. Unfortunately, a canvassing of the pond area in Forest Park yielded no "hits" by the search and rescue dogs. The dogs did show some interest in the nearby golf course, but the scent likely was not fresh. Film recorded at one of the Forest Park feeding stations showed a small white dog and her larger companion chowing down. Unfortunately, the white dog was not Vivi, and there are concerns that some previous sightings may have been of this dog. Given that Vivi has not been sighted in weeks, two conclusions are possible: One, that she has moved on and is in another area. Or two, she has whelped puppies in the vicinity and is staying close to them. Searchers are in the process of obtaining a "bionic ear" hearing amplifier, in the hopes of hearing Vivi if she is bedded down in the adjacent acreage or graveyards. Pet detective Karin Goin is expected to arrive later this week to help track down the little whippet that has, in McCann's words, "broken all the rules" as to how runaway sighthounds are supposed to behave. August 25, 2006Vivi Profile #2The second in an occasional series that introduces Vivi searchers near and far. Name: Karen Stinnett August 23, 2006Duke updateDuke's owner Denise Menendez reports that the pitbull was granted a stay of execution and will not be euthanized on Friday. Another rally is planned -- stay tuned. Emanwhile, Duke's website (and petition): www.SaveDuke.homestead.com August 22, 2006The Dukes of Hazard?Duke the pitbull has a web site where supporters can sign a petition: www.SaveDuke.homestead.com Dog trainer says death row rulings were unjustifiedBY DENISE FLAIM Duke's time is running out - and Jeff Kolbjornsen would give anything to just throw away the hourglass. Kolbjornsen, 46, founder and owner of Elite Animal Trainers in Islip Terrace, recently developed an avocation for saving death-row dogs named Duke. The first, a 1-year-old bulldog from East Meadow who tagged along with two Rottweilers when they mauled a 4-year-old boy in April, was spared. But the other Duke - an amber-eyed pit bull who accosted this reporter with slobbery kisses - is slated to be euthanized Friday. "These two Dukes have a lot of things in common," said Kolbjornsen, who brought the two together for a photograph yesterday. "Both of them have been unjustly accused." Duke the pit bull has been impounded at the Town of Islip shelter for 2 1/2 years - more than half the 4 1/2-year-old dog's life. He was deemed a dangerous dog in November 2003 when his owner, Denise Menendez of Hauppauge, failed to attend a hearing to respond to a neighbor's accusations that Duke and her female pit bull had attacked his dogs and horse. (Menendez said her husband went to the wrong court house.) Menendez failed to follow the court's order to keep the dogs penned when outside, and a month later, the neighbor, Dominick Motta, alleged the pit bulls attacked his American bulldog. In February 2004, a judge ordered that Duke be euthanized. This July, the appellate division of the State Supreme Court denied Duke's most recent appeal. Kolbjornsen said Menendez hired him a year ago to evaluate Duke. He started with pressing and pulling on the pit bull's ears, feet and flanks. No response, but for tail wags. Kolbjornsen rolled the unneutered male on his back. He picked him up and restrained him. He ran up to his face and stamped his feet. He took away toys, moved his food bowl while he was eating. Nada. Zero. Zip. "I was pushing this dog to see if he would react, but he has the temperament of a Labrador retriever," said Kolbjornsen, who organized a rally last week to publicize Duke's plight and has helped Menendez find new legal representation. "There's no proof that this dog was the one that did it, and everything points to the fact that he didn't." Workers at the shelter mirror Kolbjornsen's assessment, saying the dog's greatest transgression has been to leap atop a table to help himself to a container of Milk-Bones during Menendez's frequent visits. Kolbjornsen, whose calm, steady manner invariably evokes comparisons to "Dog Whisperer" Cesar Millan, said he helps rehabilitate problem dogs for local shelters, and has about 10 dogs available for adoption to the right homes. He added that a request to stay Duke the pit bull's euthanasia order could be filed as early as today. The first Duke already has his fairy-tale ending: The two Rottweilers involved in the child's mauling were euthanized, with the young bulldog headed for a similar fate - until Kolbjornsen volunteered to evaluate him. Kolbjornsen's temperament testing confirmed what many bulldog aficionados already suspected: "Duke's a follower - he doesn't show any signs of being a dominant dog." A compromise to save the dog's life was struck when Kolbjornsen agreed to board and train Duke at his facility until the bow-legged bowser is placed with a new owner who lives out of state and does not have any children. "He's a great dog - I just told him that tonight," Kolbjornsen said of the smushed-faced pup. "I'm going to be sad to see him go." Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc. August 21, 2006Not-so-little considerationsFrom today's column:Little dogs aren't for toyingDenise Flaim August 21, 2006 Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc. Photos (c) Newsday and Getty Images August 18, 2006Vivi Voices, #1Vivi Voices
The first in an occasional series
Location: Inwood, N.Y.
Age: 40
Occupation: Marketing.
Family: One husband, five dogs.
What hubby thinks about her Vivi mania: "Total insanity, but he loves me and respects my love for animals."
Hobbies: Looking for Vivi. Before that: tennis, swimming, sun worshipping
Theme song: "Suicide Blonde."
Favorite meal: Alaskan king crab legs.
Guiltiest pleasure: Calling in sick to lie out in the sun.
Celebrity who looks most like her: "Pam Anderson after an industrial accident."
Role in the Vivi search: Foot soldier and "clumsy walking disaster."
Best Vivi-search memory: Drinking beer, eating raw weenies and muffins at 9 a.m. on a Saturday morning while in a cemetery. ("We were starving and parched but couldn't leave that area.")
Worst-Vivi search memory: Rushing to the Belt Parkway to check a potential sighting of a whippet that was hit and killed by a car.
Dumbest piece of Vivi advice she's heard: Break her leg.
The best: Remain calm.
What people ask her most about Vivi: "Why are you still looking?"
What she'll do after Vivi is found: "Throw a huge party and put her in the front seat of my husband's fire truck, Ladder 174 in Brooklyn. Then take a long break and just hang with all of my new Vivi friends."
August 15, 2006Farewell, Famed FelineLuck Runs Out for Undercover Cat By Anthony M. DeStefano (c) 2006, Newsday NEW YORK — Like a shooting star, his life was short and bright. But Fred, the friendly undercover kitty who captivated the city with his law enforcement exploits, is dead.
Just over a year old, Fred was found dead in the street by Carol Moran, the animal’s adoptive owner who is an assistant district attorney with Hynes. “He belonged to the world. I wish I could apologize,” said a distraught Moran. The driver of the vehicle never stopped, Moran said. She added that it was unclear if the driver even knew an animal had been hit. Fred catapulted to fame in February when prosecutors used him to lure a suspected bogus veterinarian to a home in Brooklyn. The suspect, Steven Vassall, 28, allegedly said he could make house calls for animals. With Fred looking on from his carrier, Vassall told undercover detectives that he would neuter the animal for $135, prosecutors said. Vassall was arrested when he stepped outside the home with Fred. Vassall, who has pleaded not guilty, faces charges of unauthorized use of a professional title, as well as torturing and injuring animals he allegedly worked on. Fred appeared at news conferences and received awards, including a special “Broadway Barks 8” citation from a theater district animal adoption benefit. Transported puppies meet fiery death60 puppies headed to Northeast pet stores die in tractor-trailer fire in Massachusetts LOWELL, Mass. (AP) — A trailer carrying dozens of puppies to Northeast pet stores caught fire just off an interstate, killing all of the estimated 60 dogs inside, authorities said. The driver first noticed smoke coming from his trailer just before 5 p.m. Monday, state police said. He pulled over, and the Lowell Fire Department put out the flames that engulfed the trailer, but they couldn’t save the puppies. The puppies were a variety of breeds between the ages of 8 and 12 weeks, according to a state police news release. Neither the driver, identified as Joseph Price, 40, of Joplin, Mo., nor his passenger, William Iriarte, 50, of Nesho, Mo., was injured. A preliminary investigation indicated that a malfunctioning fan in the rear of the trailer may have started the fire, police said. No charges have been filed. The truck was owned by the Hunte Corp. of Goodman, Mo., a major puppy supplier for pet stores. “The puppies were all beautiful, healthy purebreds that were on their way to quality retailers in the northeast and eventually to loving New England families,” the company said in a statement. The company said it has a near-perfect safety record. August 14, 2006Six months tomorrowSearch coordinator Bonnie Folz checks in: <<Vivi Update - 8/14/06www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5638218 Tuesday, August 15, marks the sixth-month anniversary of the day that Vivi was lost by employees of Delta Airlines at JFK Airport. As I reflect back on that day, I can remember exactly what I was doing when I found out about the whippet lost in the airport just minutes from my home. I thought I'd grab a coat and gloves and run out quickly to help corral the dog. She'd be on her merry way, back to wherever it was she was flying off to in no time. Never, ever did I imagine that six months later, I would be sitting here typing "updates" to the world on the progress being made to still try and find Vivi. Funny how the careless actions of one can change so many lives, huh? The Vivi Team spent much of last week making phone calls and typing emails coordinating what our next move would be. Trying to stay ahead of Vivi has not been easy. We're happy that Vivi has been in and around the same area for about two months now, but pinpointing a specific location or even a few block radius of where she may be, is anyone's guess. We are working with a huge, in some spots, heavily wooded, park and cemeteries spanning a good couple of miles, not to mention the various neighborhoods bordering them. We've set up a feeding station and a couple of cameras, but are having instances with the cameras not working properly. I hope to get this issue resolved as soon as possible as these cameras are our eyes when we cannot be around. After Denise Flaim's article last week on Viv's upcoming anniversary, National Public Radio called to do a phone interview. The Vivi Team was also contacted by the NY Daily News, the Queens Tribune and People magazine to do follow-up stories. Some of the local radio stations picked up on the story and mentioned Vivi as well. Keeping Vivi alive in the media is very important to our search effort as it will help us to keep the public aware that she is still missing. Though we continue to post up fliers, these may sometimes go unnoticed by someone who may have seen Vivi and may read about her or see her on the news. This weekend's "Vivi Door Hanger Blitz" went fairly well. We had about 15 volunteers on hand to put door hangers out to nearby residences, posting and reposting where flyers may have become weathered or torn down as well as canvassing the area. Jil's fiancé, Rick (Vivi's dad-to-be), will be back in New York within the next week or so. We are also looking into bringing tracking dogs back to possibly narrow down an area where Vivi may be frequenting so we can concentrate on a smaller area for feeding stations. We need to have Vivi comfortably coming back to a feeding station on a regular basis before any talk of actually trapping her can be done. Lots of small steps to take before Vivi is back home, but the Vivi Team volunteers have shoes with thick soles (well, maybe a few holes here and there), and we are keeping the faith! Bonnie>> August 12, 2006Vivi in multimediaNational Public Radio chimes in at www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5638218 Be sure to listen to the audio. Not-so-little birds tell me People magazine has been sniffing around, too! August 09, 2006Latest Vivi updateSearch coordinator Bonnie Folz updates: <<Good news! We received two sightings of Vivi, back to back, on Monday afternoon just a half hour apart! Seems that Vivi has been in Forest Park and surrounding areas since mid-June. For those who do not know Forest Park, it is densely wooded in many spots, unlike the other parks Vivi has visited before, with ample supply of water and a wildlife buffet. As I surveyed the recent sighting area, I heard a small rustling in the brush. I looked down to see a beautiful black kitten, maybe 10 weeks old, staring back at me. As I tried to approach her, she scrambled away a few feet and turned back to look at me. As I continued on my walk I heard squeaking from that same area. I took a few steps back to look at the kitten and this time when she looked up at me, she had a field mouse in her mouth. All I can say is, if this young kitten is hunting and surviving in this park, Vivi is probably doing just fine. We are hoping Vivi has become comfortable with her surroundings and will stay in there till she can be trapped. Vivi will be missing for six months this coming Tuesday. I know there are many cases of lost dogs being missing for longer periods of time and continue to pray that she will be back with Jil soon. We are in the process of setting up feeding stations with motion cameras and ask that anyone that would like to help in the search and visits the park or surrounding area, please, DO NOT leave food out for her when you go. It has become more of a hindrance than help with too much food being left out. We also know trampling the area looking for Vivi will only startle her and drive her away. It is suggested that those who wish to help, find a spot within the park or cemeteries and simply sit and watch. You may want to bring along binoculars and some tasty, smelly treats and make believe you're snacking on them while nonchalantly "bird watching" per se. This is probably the best way any of us will be able to spot her and keep her in the area. We are also working with tracking dog people to come in and possibly give us a better look at where Vivi may have been and narrow down the area. I am coordinating a "Vivi Door Hanger Party" this Saturday, starting at 8 a.m. We will meet at the Forest Park Band Shell parking lot just inside the park on Forest Park Drive off of Woodhaven Blvd in Glendale. The door hangers have been ordered and we plan to get them out to as many homes as possible. We are in dire need of volunteers. Please, if anyone can come out, meet us on Saturday. If you cannot be out at the time we are meeting, please contact me and I'll be glad to get you supplies and provide you with what blocks still needed to covered, 917-626-1374. We can ALWAYS use any extra help anyone can give, even if it's for a few hours during the week. There's been a break in the heat wave we've had here in NYC and the weather looks good for the days ahead. We hope to get more media coverage to help with our continued focus on keeping the public aware that Vivi is still missing and has been seen. Numerous volunteers continue the email, fax and mailing campaign as well as those on the ground posting fliers. These are truly Vivi's angels. Thank you, Denise and Newsday, for keeping folks aware. I appreciate everyone's continued support. Keep the faith! Bonnie>> August 08, 2006Vivi -- six months and counting<<In tomorrow's print editions, and currently up on the Newsday.com home page, along with a slide show. Denise>> Search for 'Vivi' continues BY DENISE FLAIM Remember Vivi? A handful of diehard searchers do. Copyright 2006 Newsday Inc. AP Photo/Westminster Kennel Club>> August 07, 2006The Phoenix RisesAfter lying low for an excruciating (to her searchers, at least) two weeks, Vivi resurfaced this afternoon -- not once, but twice. Two passersby called the Vivi hotline around 4 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. to say they had startled the whippet while she had been bedded down in the brush in and around Forest Park in Glendale. In both cases, she bolted. This is the same area where Vivi has been spotted multiple times in of July. While these Vivi sightings are indeed welcome news, the hope is that searchers will focus their efforts on raising awareness of Vivi's presence among area residents through putting up fliers and posters instead of trying to "track her down." Sighthound rescuers such as Michael McCann of Greyhound Amber Alert stress that in order to capture lost dogs such as Vivi, the goal should be to encourage her to establish a routine -- something she has not done to date. Generating too much activity and disturbing her at a time when she seems to be making herself at home could prompt her to move on into newer -- perhaps more dangerous -- territory. August 02, 2006Hemingway's Bigfoots, take 2For kitty sympathizers, there is an online petition in support of the Hemingway cats at www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi?MCPI. For those curious about the genetic mutation that gives them extra toes -- a condition formally called polydactyly -- here is a column I did on the subject last year: These cats have fancy footwork By Denise Flaim Hemingway had a lot of them. And we're not talking about hangovers. Though they sound like something out of the Mesozoic Era, polydactyl cats are, literally, "many toed," having more than the requisite five front toes (including the dewclaw, which does not touch the ground) and four rear toes. (Ironically, the noun form of the word, polydactyly, resembles the condition it describes, with that last "y" looking for all the world like a superfluous appendage.) While the most famous of these big-footed felines reside at the "Old Man and the Sea" author's Key West home, polydactyl cats aren't as rare as one might think. Colonies persist in certain cities - many of them port towns such as Boston and Halifax, Nova Scotia - and polydactyl cats have been noted in Britain and Scandinavia.
But seafaring isn't the only cause of their far-flung popularity. "Polydactyly crops up rather frequently" in cats, says Leslie Lyons, an assistant professor and geneticist at School of Veterinary Medicine at the University of California at Davis. In some instances, she says, it is a mutation that just spontaneously arises. In some breeds, such as Maine Coons, polydactyly is thought to be a simple dominant trait: Only one parent needs to be polydactyl in order to pass it on, with each offspring having a 50 percent chance of being "digitally enhanced." This is presumably how Hemingway's extended cat family earned its tropical snowshoes. And conversely, such dominant traits are easy to breed away from, which is how polydactyl Maine Coons - by some estimates comprising 40 percent of the breed in its early days - were curtailed in that purebred population: Modern breeders simply decided not to breed cats with the trait. Today, some Maine Coon breeders have revived these "polycoons," and are lobbying to have them accepted. In only one breed, the Pixie-Bob - created in the American Northwest to resemble the wild look of the native bobcat - are polydactyl cats considered as acceptable as "straightfoots." (Though seven toes is the official limit.) Some of the bias against polydactyly may come from a concern that the extra toes adversely affect a cat's health or functioning. This does not seem to be the case, says Lyons. "I see it as a rather innocuous variant," compared to others, such as Munchkin cats, which exhibit a form of dwarfism that can arguably make life more physically challenging. The extra digits even come in handy - literally. "Some polys actually use and manipulate them to grasp and pick up food." Predictably, polydactyls are popular, "just because they're different," says Pixie-Bob breeder Amy Peterson of LegendTales Cattery in Everett, Wash. Her only caveat is that owners need to carefully trim all those excess claws, which can become overgrown and curve into the paw pad. A footnote in this polydactyl discussion is an unfortunate phenomenon dubbed Twisty Kats by the Texas horse breeder who created a Web site about them five or so years ago. Produced from pairings of bobtailed polydactyls, these deformed cats had radial hypoplasia, resulting in underdeveloped, missing, misshapen or flipperlike forearms. The "kangaroo cats" caused a furor on the Internet, and the breeder is not offering them for sale. Lyons stresses that the twisty mutation is "the more extreme expression" of polydactyly, and it is not a foregone conclusion that poly breeders will produce it. But as breeders seek to revive and even create more polydactyl breeds - polys crossed with Bengals, for example, are now dubbed Mojave Spotteds - they need to be especially vigilant. "Breeders should be responsible and breed carefully to make sure there are no health issues," Lyons says, adding that too close inbreeding and a focus on the more toes, the merrier might lead to trouble down the line. "At some point," she concludes about the impulse to add "just one more" toe, "you have to ask yourself, 'When do you call it quits?'" Write to Denise Flaim, c/o Newsday, 235 Pinelawn Rd., Melville, NY 11747- 4250; or e-mail denise.flaim@newsday.com. (c) Newsday Photo credit: Amy Peterson Papa's polydactyl kitties in a turmoilHemingway home asks judge to intervene in cat dispute with USDA MIAMI (AP) — The caretakers of Ernest Hemingway’s Key West home want a federal judge to intervene in their dispute with the U.S. Department of Agriculture over the six-toed cats that roam the property.
“What they’re comparing the Hemingway house to is a circus or a zoo because there are cats on the premises,” Cara Higgins, the home’s attorney, said Friday. “This is not a traveling circus. These cats have been on the premises forever.” A message left Friday afternoon at the Washington, D.C., office of the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service was not immediately returned. The agency has repeatedly denied a license for the Hemingway home under the Animal Welfare Act, which the home contends governs animals in commerce. The USDA has threatened to charge the home $200 per cat per day for violating the act, according to the complaint. “We’re asking the judge to let us know whether this act applies to the cats, and if so why that is if the animals are not in commerce,” Higgins said. “If it has something to do with the number of cats, how many do we have to get rid of to be in compliance with the act?” Agency inspectors who have repeatedly visited the property since October 2003 have never indicated any concerns about the welfare of the cats. But they have said a 6-foot-high, brick-and-mortar fence Hemingway built around the property in 1937 did not sufficiently contain the 53 cats, which should be caged, according to the complaint. Caging the cats, some of which are 19 years old or older, would traumatize them, and the home’s designation as a National Historic Site prohibits extending the height of the fence, the complaint said. The tourist site complies with city and county ordinances, Higgins said. “We don’t know why the USDA got involved in this,” she said. (c) The Associated Press (AP Photo/Florida Keys News Bureau, Roberto Rodriguez) CategoriesJuly 2008
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