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Three-bedroom house on sale for astonishing price of £25,000... can YOU spot the catch?
Three-bedroom house on sale for astonishing price of £25,000... can YOU spot the catch?

Daily Mail​

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Three-bedroom house on sale for astonishing price of £25,000... can YOU spot the catch?

This three bedroom house in the quaint Tyne and Wear town of Hetton-le-Hole is being sold for just £25,000 and is - on the surface - an absolute steal. But a look inside the property, which also includes a rear garden, reveals the hell its future owner has to deal with. The terraced property, on Caroline Street, is covered wall-to-wall with piles of rubbish. Its spacious living room has a ceiling-high mound of rubbish, presumably from a previous owner. Among the filth, bags of toys can be seen strewn around alongside baby carriers. A path from the front door to the kitchen through the rubbish has apparently been carved out. The kitchen doesn't fare much better with old dirty clothes barely covering the grimy floor. Boxes of old food, including what appears to be a box of Lidl's Crownfield Bixies and a bag of oats, can be seen across the counters. And the boiler appears to have a hazard sticker, warning inhabitants not to use it over safety concerns. Upstairs in the bathroom, the tub is in a state of severe disrepair while the rest of the room is littered with old cardboard boxes. One bedroom upstairs appears to have old cans of Strongbow cider on its shelves, as well as several half-drunk bottles of Pepsi across the floor. Another bedroom, which appears to have belonged to a child, was seen covered in a mix of children's toys and electronics. Several rolls of bin liners can be seen on the floor as well. It's not clear what happened to the previous occupants of the home. It comes after Rightmove data revealed that some parts of Britain saw property sales almost double in the last year. May 2025 saw the largest number of agreed property sales out of any month since March 2022. May is typically a busy point in the year for agreed sales, which is when an offer has been made and accepted. However, this year's figure reflects an improvement in housing market conditions, according to Rightmove. Across the UK, the number of sales agreed is now 6 per cent ahead of the same period last year. However, this trend is more prominent in some areas than others. In Wales, the number of sales being agreed is 15 per cent higher than at this time last year, whereas in London the figure is just 1 per cent higher.

Sunderland: A club rebooted, renewed and one game from a Premier League return
Sunderland: A club rebooted, renewed and one game from a Premier League return

New York Times

time23-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

Sunderland: A club rebooted, renewed and one game from a Premier League return

It was heading towards midnight as a packed Tyne & Wear Metro train pulled away from the station at the Stadium of Light. The smiling faces crammed in were soon staring at mobile phone footage of the moment they had all just witnessed live: the stooping header from Dan Ballard in the last seconds of extra-time in the Championship play-off semi-final against Coventry City that takes Sunderland to Wembley on Saturday. Advertisement There were fresh roars after each replay of Ballard's goal, then the comments (plural) that this was the best moment in the 28-year history of the Stadium of Light — even better than Jermain Defoe's volley against Newcastle United in 2015. Maybe it was. If so, it will be due to the dramatic lateness of Ballard's goal, to the potential prize it sets up — a return to the Premier League — but also because of where Sunderland have been these past eight seasons since dropping miserably out of the top tier in 2017 with a point less than Leicester City have this season. Sunderland suffered another joyless relegation a year later and then spent four seasons — four — in League One. It was unthinkable. But in December 2020, Kristjaan Speakman was appointed as the club's sporting director, and a day later Lee Johnson arrived as head coach. This followed the dismissal of Phil Parkinson, who was to find compensation in his next role… at Wrexham. Something was happening at Sunderland and two months later the club formally announced Kyril Louis-Dreyfus, aged 23, had acquired 'a controlling interest' and was to become chairman. Change was welcomed on Wearside, although the fact that existing directors remained caused some unease. Stewart Donald, whose questionable ownership had been captured on the Netflix series 'Sunderland 'Til I Die', hailed the 'vision and desire' of his young successor. Funnily enough, the Netflix series was being viewed in the United States by Parkinson's next employer, Rob McElhenney. 'I was watching Sunderland 'Til I Die and I was falling in love with this team and these people and the story,' McElhenney told the BBC. 'In all honesty, it was the first time I had understood the concept of promotion and relegation. … I recognised that if you can get relegated, of course then you can also get promoted … so even though I couldn't afford to buy say Liverpool, or Sunderland for that matter, or Manchester City, Manchester United, maybe we could afford to buy a lower-league team and have them ascend through the ranks.' Advertisement McElhenney looked at Hartlepool United, 20 miles south of Sunderland, but settled on Wrexham and soon brought in Parkinson. Should Sunderland not succeed against Sheffield United, Parkinson will return to the Stadium of Light next season. Wrexham have not played at Sunderland for 46 years. The Welsh club is transformed. Sunderland do not merit that description — yet. But they are re-formed. 'From the first day I walked in, to now? It's a different club,' Luke O'Nien, the longest-serving senior player, tells The Athletic. 'That's my personal opinion. To me, it's chalk and cheese.' It is a view shared by many supporters. Sunderland's trajectory has been upwards, though not without interruptions, dips and controversies. Johnson could not force the team past Lincoln City in a League One play-off semi-final in Covid-affected 2021; his team then lost 6-0 at Bolton Wanderers in February 2022. Alex Neil came in and took Sunderland up via a play-off win at Wembley against Wycombe Wanderers in May 2022, but walked out to Stoke City three months later. Tony Mowbray and Michael Beale followed Neil, with Mike Dodds a four-month caretaker last season. Regis Le Bris became the fifth manager of the new ownership last summer. All the while, the club focused on reducing its age profile, buying young and, particularly under Mowbray, developing a playing style that had neutrals' heads turning. The eight-man move finished by Jack Clarke at Reading in September 2022 epitomised this. Now, here they are, the youngest squad in the Championship, facing the Blades at Wembley. Sunderland have assets — Chris Rigg (17), Jobe Bellingham (19), Eliezer Mayenda (20), captain Dan Neil (23), and more — not financial burdens as in the 2017 relegation team, the likes of Jack Rodwell and Didier Ndong. And they are 90 minutes away from a return to the Premier League. February 2021: on a Tuesday night at Shrewsbury Town, Sunderland lost 2-1 to fall to seventh in their third season in League One. It was another dire result, a fortnight after drawing at home against Gillingham. Shrewsbury, however, is memorable as it brought a first public sighting of Louis-Dreyfus, sitting in the stands, two months after the young French-Swiss had signalled a takeover. Advertisement Louis-Dreyfus has a well-told history in football — his father, Robert, owned French club Marseille until his death in 2009 and mother, Margarita, retains a minority shareholding. Forbes' most recent estimate of her wealth stood at $5.1billion (£3.8bn), though spending at Sunderland has never been lavish. Jim Rodwell was Sunderland's chief executive then and was part of the negotiations. Now at Charlton Athletic, who are at Wembley in the League One play-off on Sunday, Rodwell tells The Athletic: 'This was never going to be about a rich family throwing money at a football club. It was always going to be about building something carefully, growing it organically and trying to be better. That was always Kyril's MO. 'These things (owning a club) are always going to cost you money but this was never anything other than what it's become. That's one of Kyril's greatest traits. He can drown out the noise and he doesn't panic.' Either side of Louis-Dreyfus's formal arrival came the appointment of Speakman, who in turn brought in Stuart Harvey as head of recruitment. Speakman had worked inside Birmingham City's productive academy and knew the Bellingham family; Harvey had been at Blackburn Rovers for five years as the club gained a reputation for developing young players, sometimes loanees such as Harvey Elliott from Liverpool. Soon, Sunderland's recruitment began to shift. In came players such as Dennis Cirkin, 19, from Tottenham Hotspur, where he had not made the first team, Trai Hume, 19, from Linfield in the Irish League for £150,000, and two young players on loan from Bayern Munich: Leon Dajaku and Thorben Hoffmann. Out went older players such as Max Power and Will Grigg. Sunderland's squad was being reshaped. Callum Doyle, 17, came from Manchester City. Amad, 20, would join from Manchester United. Within football, Sunderland were altering perceptions of what the club was. Rather than old and jaded, it was young and vibrant — in the 1-1 FA Cup tie at Fulham in January 2023, Sunderland completed the game with the youngest team in their 143-year history. Earlier that month, Rigg had become the youngest outfield player at the age of 15 years and 202 days. 'The way Kyril has taken the club forward and grown it is exactly the way he described he would before he even had it,' Rodwell says. 'Bold, creative, industrious', became club branding, its values. Eyes often roll at corporate language, but O'Nien and others inside the club say it is phrasing they can and do return to. 'To go back to then (Shrewsbury),' says O'Nien, the lone player still at Sunderland from that night, 'there's been a beautiful evolution and credit to the club, to the owner and everyone underneath for — so far — executing a really good game plan. Obviously, there's a long way to go. Advertisement 'Football is really hard to plan. I remember having a meeting in this room where it was said 'Here's the game plan, here's what we want you to buy into'. We were then held against that and, for example, when managers came in, the overall plan was always referenced. The values of the club are up all around the training ground, they're in the gym. 'There's an identity that the owner and those upstairs put in place.' In July 2023, Speakman said 'to get to where we've got so far we've had to have a bit of a start-up mentality', and addressed gripes the club had not spent £3m on a player under the new ownership, as some rivals and parachute-payment clubs spent freely. 'We're an evolving club, an evolving team, an evolving football operation,' Speakman said. Largely, the fanbase has been patient. There is an awareness on Wearside and at comparable clubs — Sheffield United, for instance — that in modern, economically-distorted football, achievement may not be measured in trophies but in impact locally and in delivering an identity and, if possible, excitement: the Reading goal, the Ballard header etc. But an off-field strategy, one which prioritises player trading and forms part of a wider plan 'to be run sustainably', in the words of chief business officer David Bruce (formerly of MLS), has divided opinion. To some, sustainability is a byword for frugality. For others, the approach is long overdue. Sunderland spent 10 years in the Premier League and still wound up in grim financial straits. Donald's arrival in 2018 was laden with promises and it transpired he and his consortium — of which shareholder Juan Sartori was part — had leveraged Sunderland's second-year parachute payment to buy the club. They then wrote off their obligation to repay £20.5million taken from their coffers. Advertisement Louis-Dreyfus stemmed concerns and, though still losing money, Sunderland's finances are improved. Infrastructure has seen investment after years of neglect. Wages are middling for the Championship. Gate receipts, buoyed by 40,000 crowds, outstrip some Premier League clubs. Debt, once the club's scourge, is low and mostly owed to the owners, interest-free. Sustainability is close to impossible in the Championship but Sunderland fare better than most: 16 clubs in the division lost more money than them last season. Louis-Dreyfus has upset supporters a couple of times: when his 'controlling interest' was revealed to be a 41 per cent stake in February 2022 and when Sunderland redecorated a hospitality area in the colours of rivals Newcastle United ahead of an FA Cup third round tie last season. 'I regret to have let you down,' he said. But, says Rodwell, 'his motives were undoubted. It's unavoidable that he comes from a very wealthy dynasty but he loves football. He's football crazy. He's been around football all his life. 'He wanted to prove to people that he can turn something around and that he can build something. I also think he wanted to honour his father's legacy.' Another ambition stated in the club's 2023 accounts was to return to the Premier League 'within five years of acquiring control'. To accomplish that tomorrow would be ahead of schedule. When Le Bris entered the building last summer on Wearside, little was known about the 48-year-old from Brittany — other than he was not Will Still. Still had been shown around the club, under cover, in May, but chose to join Lens in France's Ligue 1. Both Still and Le Bris, who left Lorient after their demotion to Ligue 2, must have looked at how Sunderland had finished the 2023-24 season and wondered what could be done without an injection of cash and personnel. Sunderland tumbled from sixth to 16th in their last 15 games, winning only two and scoring only eight goals. But Le Bris had a past in youth football and had led Lorient to 10th place in 2022-23. Plus, Sunderland were not going to suddenly change a policy based on the recruitment of players under 24, often under 20. Le Bris at least knew the reality. Nor were Sunderland going to rip up self-imposed prudence, though around £2.5m was committed to the signing of Serbian Milan Aleksic on his 19th birthday last August — and £16m has been committed to sign Enzo Le Fee should Sunderland win promotion. Aleksic came the week after Clarke departed for Ipswich Town for £17m. Having been recruited from Tottenham for under £1m, the club's model had some transfer market vindication. Ross Stewart had also been sold to Southampton for £10m and then, recently, an agreement was struck to sell Tommy Watson to Brighton for £10m next month. Watson will be at Wembley. Advertisement How Sunderland would cope without Clarke was Wearside's question. He started the first two games of this Championship season, at Cardiff City and home to Sheffield Wednesday; both were won. Game three was Burnley at home. Sunderland won it 1-0 with a goal from Clarke's successor on the left, Romaine Mundle. Another former Spurs player, acquired from Standard Liege for around £1m aged 21, Mundle is an example of shrewd recruitment and thoughtful succession planning. Victory at home to Oxford United meant that as November began, Sunderland had nine wins from 12 games and were five points clear at the top of the Championship. The club held an open training session at the stadium. Neil spoke to The Athletic. Neil was 22 when Le Bris arrived and, a few days before the opening fixture at Cardiff, was made captain. A local boy, 'obviously I said: 'Yes!'' Neil explained. He then talked through Le Bris' coaching style and impact. 'He's very calm — whether we're losing, drawing 1-1, winning 3-0, it's the same character we see, very assured,' Neil said. 'He looks at the game in a strategic way, rather than an emotional way. He looks with a bird's-eye view. 'He was very structured at the start. We didn't really have a natural No 6 in the squad and I'd played that role before. We did a lot of structure-based practice in pre-season and I think he liked how I was in that role, how vocal I was. I understood how he wanted the team to function. It's pretty much a 4-3-3, but we used to play with two kind of pivots. Now it's a single pivot with two 8s in front. 'He (Le Bris) is very big on side triangles — full-back, winger, No 8. I think he likes the No 6 to be the glue in that. It's all about triangles, triangles all over. He's made it simple. Slowly, layers are being added, me dropping into a back five, things like that.' All was positive. Six months on, Neil sits down at the training ground and considers a fourth-place finish, the Coventry play-off games and the run of five losses preceding them. 'When we had that little bad spell at the end of the season,' he says, 'we had a meeting. We said we'd stopped doing what had got us to the top of the league. That last-minute goal at Leeds (in mid-February) took the wind out of our sails. We weren't doing the things we were good at in terms of structure, those triangles. We said we'd get back to doing what we're good at.' Advertisement Coventry away demonstrated renewed commitment to the structure, though it looked unambitious and restrictive at home and Ballard's goal was unrepresentative of the second leg's flow. It gives Sunderland a fifth Wembley appearance in six years. The focus on youth disguises the experience within the squad — Neil has 197 first-team appearances — and continuity of on-pitch relationships. O'Nien, 30, has played in the previous four at Wembley — two play-off finals, two EFL Trophy finals; two won, two lost. If boiled down to one word, the chalk-and-cheese difference O'Nien has witnessed since Shrewsbury is: 'Systems'. He says: 'There are now processes in place: team culture, demands in training, systems, direction and buy-in from everybody. There's clarity. In training, we know exactly what we want: we don't do a possession drill for the sake of it, it's because it's how we'll set up at the weekend. We work all week on patterns. 'So we're always referencing a strategy, systems; there are systems for everything.' O'Nien took to Le Bris, someone he knew nothing of, after the first week when he went to the new coach to ask where he could improve. 'He (Le Bris) went onto his computer and he had eight games of each of us broken down into clips,' O'Nien says. 'He said: 'Two secs, there's video footage — I want that, that and that'. Before he came into the building, he had footage of every one of us. I bought into that straightaway. 'He didn't come in and just take over. He observed, he learned, did his research. He was drip-feeding things into us. We'd review it, and if you didn't do it, he'd ask: 'Why not? What's the problem?' 'That's the process. We always go back to the team structure. Me, personally, I always used to think: 'What do I need to do?' Now I think: 'What does the team need me to do?' That's how it's affected me. I see that in other people's game, especially in the play-offs; players making sacrifices, running. When you've got 11 people thinking 'What does the team need?', that's a powerful formula. Advertisement 'You're in between three, four, five managers and we've all got history — he (Le Bris) appreciated that. It's easy to dismiss the managers before, but they're just as valuable to where the club is now. Alex Neil was very good, put in clear structures, more detail. Tony Mowbray was an incredible man for this football club. He has this way of empowering people — look what he did to Amad. He went from not playing much, then with eight or nine games under Mr Mowbray, Amad has played some of the best football this club's ever seen.' Perhaps the word Le Bris uses most in press conferences — and, it seems, in meetings — is 'connection' and O'Nien says 'that's probably the biggest thing about this team — it's a word we use in team talks. We can only be as strong as our weakest player. 'The beauty is we have one hell of a squad and we're all connected, but if one person is disconnected, the level of training will fall to that player's level. So it's important to have that connection. It's fine to have off days, but that's where the connection brings him back in'. Four years ago, as Louis-Dreyfus took his seat at Shrewsbury, disconnection was Sunderland's dominant theme. And, of course, Wembley could bring disappointment and, from there, questions. But the response on the Metro to Ballard's goal speaks of renewal on and off the pitch. The club is rebooted. Fans like their team. 'I love the players to bits,' O'Nien says, 'because they've put in the work. The work has cemented the future. Whether that's the Premier League or the Championship, we'll turn up to pre-season in July and the work continues. 'You don't change the strategy, we go bigger and better.' Additional reporting: Chris Weatherspoon (Illustration: Eamonn Dalton / The Athletic; George Wood,)

‘You killed my son': Explosion victim's mother sobs as cannabis gummy dealer sentenced
‘You killed my son': Explosion victim's mother sobs as cannabis gummy dealer sentenced

The Independent

time14-05-2025

  • The Independent

‘You killed my son': Explosion victim's mother sobs as cannabis gummy dealer sentenced

A drug dealer who caused the death of a seven-year-old boy in an explosion has been sent to prison for 14 years. Reece Galbraith and his friend Jason 'Jay' Laws were using a Newcastle flat as a drugs lab when a blast ripped through the building in the early hours of October 16. The explosion killed both Laws and Archie York, who was asleep in the flat above. Galbraith, of Rectory Road, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, admitted two counts of manslaughter as well as possessing and supplying cannabis, at a hearing in April. He was sentenced on Wednesday at Newcastle Crown Court. Archie's mother, Katherine Errington, shouted 'you killed my son' at Galbraith as she read her victim impact statement in court. She sobbed as she told the defendant: 'You brought gas canisters into a building where families lived. You ran a drugs operation under the floor where my children slept. 'You took risks for profit and didn't care who got hurt. You killed my son.' The blast on Violet Close, Benwell, wrecked the street and made families homeless. The court heard it destroyed six out of the 12 flats in the block and was followed by a 'fierce fire', which caused so much damage the whole block has since been demolished. Police investigating the explosion discovered that the flat operated by Galbraith and Laws was used as a 'drugs lab' to produce cannabis concentrates, known as 'shatter' or 'butane honey oil', in a highly dangerous process. The product was then turned into cannabis edibles, also known as 'gummies'. Archie was asleep on the sofa with his father, Robbie York, when the blast ripped through the family home. Ms Errington was pulled out of the rubble by Mr York, who also found Archie's seven-week-old brother Finley, covered in dust but 'astonishingly unharmed', in the wreckage. But Mr York could not find Archie and they were told later that he had died. Ms Errington said she was 'furious' when she was informed within a week of Archie's death that shatter was being made in the flat below. Prosecutor David Brooke KC said Laws had been using the flat for months and there was 'little purpose' for it other than the production of cannabis. The court heard Galbraith, Laws' partner in the 'enterprise', was found walking away from the street immediately after the explosion asking about his friend. He suffered extensive burns and was in hospital for about a month, initially in an induced coma. At the time of the explosion, Galbraith was already being investigated for being concerned in the supply of cannabis, after police stopped his car in April and found cannabis bush, a set of scales and cannabis sweets. Officers later found 250 cannabis sweets, moulds and 300g of a sweet mixture when they searched his house. He was released pending further investigation. Police also found evidence on his phone that he was dealing in cannabis and cannabis sweets 'full-time' with Laws from at least as far back as November 2023. Experts found that the explosion was caused by the ignition of liquid butane gas, which had been released and built up within the premises as part of the illegal 'shatter' production. More than 100 butane canisters were found in the flat, Mr Brooke said, as well as other 'sophisticated and expensive' equipment'. The prosecutor said: 'The process of making shatter is inherently dangerous because butane is highly flammable. 'It is a process that has to be done with the utmost care to avoid an explosion.' The court heard the blast had had 'an enormous impact locally' and 10 households had to be permanently rehoused. More than 100 people were displaced to temporary accommodation and 53 of the 80 residents will not be returning. The financial impact is said to be about £3.7 million.

Metro fare dodging down near pre-pandemic levels
Metro fare dodging down near pre-pandemic levels

Yahoo

time10-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Metro fare dodging down near pre-pandemic levels

Fare evasion on the Tyne and Wear Metro appears to have dropped back to close to pre-pandemic levels. The rail service's operator Nexus estimated fares had been dodged on about 4.6% of journeys in 2024. This is down from the 8.3% level it estimated in 2021 and closer to the 4.0% recorded in 2019. Nexus operations director Kevin Storey said the company had worked "extremely hard" to reduce ticket fraud. Kevin Dickinson, who runs the Sort out the Metro Facebook group, said the drop could also be due to the Metro becoming free in 2021 for children aged below 11 who travelled with an adult. Nexus said it had made its estimates using a team of researchers who survey people on the Metro. "While this is based on passengers admitting they don't have a ticket, our team of researchers do not issue penalty fares and act as neutral surveyors," a spokesperson said. Mr Dickinson said it was "good to see" fare evasion was dropping on the rail service but suggested that if this was due to some children aged below 11 no longer having to pay for the service, it did not mean an increase in revenue. He also said the figures did not take into account the fact that the annual number of journeys on the Metro had yet to return to pre-pandemic levels, which also affected income levels. The data, provided following a freedom of information (FOI) request, showed there were more than 34.5m journeys on the Metro in 2019 compared to 30.9m in 2024. Nexus said a major factor behind the fall in fare evasion was the penalty fine for not buying a ticket rising from £20 to £100 in January 2023. "This has undoubtedly made people think twice about travelling without a ticket," said Mr Storey. He said 75% of Metro journeys had to pass through ticket gates and new barriers would be installed at Regent Centre this year. "Metro is a public service and doesn't make a profit," said Mr Storey. "Every penny that we receive in fares helps to meet the cost of operating the system." Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram. All new Metro trains pulled from service Metro Bashers find fellowship in front carriage First new Metro train runs after lengthy delays Nexus

Metro fare dodging down near pre-pandemic levels
Metro fare dodging down near pre-pandemic levels

Yahoo

time10-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Metro fare dodging down near pre-pandemic levels

Fare evasion on the Tyne and Wear Metro appears to have dropped back to close to pre-pandemic levels. The rail service's operator Nexus estimated fares had been dodged on about 4.6% of journeys in 2024. This is down from the 8.3% level it estimated in 2021 and closer to the 4.0% recorded in 2019. Nexus operations director Kevin Storey said the company had worked "extremely hard" to reduce ticket fraud. Kevin Dickinson, who runs the Sort out the Metro Facebook group, said the drop could also be due to the Metro becoming free in 2021 for children aged below 11 who travelled with an adult. Nexus said it had made its estimates using a team of researchers who survey people on the Metro. "While this is based on passengers admitting they don't have a ticket, our team of researchers do not issue penalty fares and act as neutral surveyors," a spokesperson said. Mr Dickinson said it was "good to see" fare evasion was dropping on the rail service but suggested that if this was due to some children aged below 11 no longer having to pay for the service, it did not mean an increase in revenue. He also said the figures did not take into account the fact that the annual number of journeys on the Metro had yet to return to pre-pandemic levels, which also affected income levels. The data, provided following a freedom of information (FOI) request, showed there were more than 34.5m journeys on the Metro in 2019 compared to 30.9m in 2024. Nexus said a major factor behind the fall in fare evasion was the penalty fine for not buying a ticket rising from £20 to £100 in January 2023. "This has undoubtedly made people think twice about travelling without a ticket," said Mr Storey. He said 75% of Metro journeys had to pass through ticket gates and new barriers would be installed at Regent Centre this year. "Metro is a public service and doesn't make a profit," said Mr Storey. "Every penny that we receive in fares helps to meet the cost of operating the system." Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram. All new Metro trains pulled from service Metro Bashers find fellowship in front carriage First new Metro train runs after lengthy delays Nexus

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