Post 1530
Before and after....
William Suber, South Carolina inmate 399829, born 2002, incarceration intake January 2026 at age 21, scheduled for release March 2027
Discharge Firearm inside a Building, Assault, Breaking into a Motor Vehicle
6y
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Post 1530
Before and after....
William Suber, South Carolina inmate 399829, born 2002, incarceration intake January 2026 at age 21, scheduled for release March 2027
Discharge Firearm inside a Building, Assault, Breaking into a Motor Vehicle
6y
Post 1529
"That guy stole my bike!!!" -- Before and after...
Austin Trenity Stone, South Carolina inmate 399312, born 2005, incarceration intake November 2025 at age 20, scheduled for release September 2026
Petit or Simple Larceny. Trespassing, Petit Larceny
In November 2025, a man facing charges pleaded guilty and was sentenced for stealing an electric scooter, multiple electric bikes and multiple chargers, and a bike lock -- from the campus of Coastal Carolina University -- occurring less than one month earlier.
Stone was convicted of 14 counts of larceny under $2,000 and six trespassing-related charges.
These charges stem from a slew of thefts near student housing on the university’s campus between Saturday, Oct. 18, and Monday, Oct. 20, 2025 according to court records.
6y
Post 1528
Christopher "Cuko" Vasata, Florida inmate W45460, born 1992, incarceration intake July 2019 at age 26, sentenced to life in prison; prior incarceration in February 2014 at age 21 for one year and released February 2015
Murder, Grand Theft Auto; with prior convictions for Possession of Controlled Substances, Sale/Manufacture/Delivery of Marijuana
In June 2019, a jury's vote failed to achieve a unanimous verdict for the death sentence at Christopher Vasata's murder trial. After the jury's decision was made public, a judge sentenced Vasata to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Although the verdict form showed jurors agreed the prosecutors proved the aggravating factors to justify the death penalty, they could not all come to an agreement. At least one juror voted to impose a sentence life in prison without parole.
During closing arguments, Vasata's public defender asked jurors to show him mercy and allow him to live the rest of his life in prison.
In the two-day sentencing phase, the defense team called on those closest to Vasata, his family and friends, to testify to his character. "He's caring, he's protective, he's my only big brother and the best big brother I could ever ask for," said his younger sister.
The defense team also brought in a neurological expert to talk about the impact a car crash from 2012 could have had on Vasata's brain.
"It's just that, in the moment quick decision making, that's impaired," said a neurologist who testified as an expert witness. But prosecutor cross-examination tried to show there was no evidence the car crash produced a traumatic head injury.
During closing arguments the prosecutor reminded jurors of the "cold, calculated, and pre-meditated" actions that led to the deaths of the three victims on Super Bowl Sunday in February 2017, two victims who were not even targets.
The prosecutor reminded jurors that Sean Henry, who was a target, was shot 17 times.
The verdict form suggests the jurors believed those aggravating factors outweighed any mitigating factors presented by the defense team during the sentencing phase of the trial, but still chose life in prison.
Vasata was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for three counts of first degree murder for the deaths of three people. He was also sentenced to life for attempted first degree murder and 5 years for grand theft auto, all connected to the shooting.
Subsequent appeals were not successful.
6y
Post 1528
Before and after….
Steven M Strahm, Florida inmate N41901, born 1992, incarceration intake May 2023 at age 30, scheduled for release May 2043
Murder, Aggravated Child Abuse
In March 2023, a father was sentenced to 23.3 years in prison after pleading guilty to the second-degree murder of his daughter. The sentence was the result of a plea agreement. According to the signed plea agreement, Steven Strahm plead guilty to second-degree murder and aggravated child abuse "because it was in his best interest". Strahm was credited for 815 days of time served in the local jail.
Strahm pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the death of his 7-week-old daughter which occurred in December 2020.
The infant's aunt said her sister was in a relationship with Strahm and there was no past abuse to their knowledge.
The police arrest report from Dec. 19 says Strahm confessed. He was originally arrested on charges of aggravated child abuse and child neglect.
6y
Post 1527
Before and After.....
Bradley James Peterson, Florida inmate N41082, born 2001, incarceration intake July 2022 at age 20, scheduled for release September 2026
Discharge of a Firearm from a Vehicle, Shooting/Throwing Missile at a Building, Obstruction of Crime Investigation, Felony commited with a Weapon
6y
Post 0577
"Have a good day, sir," the judge said after handing down her sentence of life imprisonment.....
Stephen M Duxbury, Florida inmate C11966, born 1982, incarceration intake November 2017 at age 35, sentenced to life
Murder, Sexual Battery, Burglary
In November 2017, a Port Orange Florida security guard who should have been protecting a woman at her Orlando apartment building instead was convicted Friday of killing her and trying to rape her.
Stephen Duxbury was sentenced to the mandatory life in prison after being found guilty of first-degree murder for strangling Sasha Samsudean. Duxbury was also convicted of attempted sexual battery with a deadly weapon or force and burglary with assault or battery.
"Have a good day, sir," the judge said after handing down her sentence of life imprisonment.
Security camera footage showed Duxbury following Samsudean, who appeared to be intoxicated, inside the building earlier that day.
Duxbury denied to police ever entering Samsudean’s apartment. But investigators found Duxbury’s thumb print on Samsudean’s toilet.
He claimed he had seen her with a man inside the building but he could not provide enough details for a composite sketch of the man.
And police noticed that Duxbury had some abrasions on his arms, including one that looked like a bite mark. They said those were from Samsudean as she struggled for her life.
Duxbury also failed a polygraph test and gave police a different pair of shoes than the one’s he had been wearing that night.
4d
Reblog
r/51
Post 0147
Jeffrey Bernard Pyne, Michigan inmate 863525, born 1989, incarceration intake February 2013 at age 23, earliest release date October 2031, maximum termination of sentence date October 2071.
Homicide
In January 2013, a Michigan jury found Pyne guilty of second-degree murder in the death of his mentally ill mother. Pyne, 22 at the time, a former high school valedictorian, star athlete and University of Michigan biology student, had been accused of killing his 51-year-old mother, Ruth Pyne, in the family’s garage. Ruth Pyne had been bludgeoned and stabbed 16 times.
At trial, Pyne never took the stand, and his defense did not call any witnesses to testify.
When the verdict was announced in court, Pyne appeared to be taken aback. Reacting to the verdict, he tilted his head slightly and blinked rapidly. He had been charged with first-degree murder but the unanimous jury found him guilty of the lesser second-degree murder charge. Pyne was well-liked in the community, and many people did not believe he was responsible for his mother’s death.
Prosecutors said he had been fueled by pent-up rage after years of abuse at the hands of his mother, who spent time in jail for assaulting him two years earlier. Charges were dropped when she was treated at a hospital and promised to stay on her medication.
But Pyne’s defense had said he was not involved in any way with his mother’s death, claiming a stranger or strangers likely attacked Ruth Pyne. The prosecution’s case had been largely circumstantial. There was no physical evidence linking Pyne to the killing, but prosecutors did present photos taken shortly after the killing that showed Pyne’s blistered hands.
Pyne has said the blisters came from throwing a wooden storage pallet at his job on a local farm.
Speaking to reporters outside the court, Pyne’s father, Bernie, said he was surprised by the verdict.
Jeffrey Pyne’s ex-girlfriend, had testified during the trial that Pryne’s mother was dangerous, delusional and off her medication. Freeman said Ruth Pyne would often assault her son, adding that Jeffrey Pyne was fearful of his little sister, Julia, being left alone in the house with their mother.
Ruth Pyne’s sister said the guilty verdict provided “some justice.”
“She was not the monster the media portrayed her to be,” Linda Jarvie told reporters. “I am deeply saddened by my sister Ruth’s senseless death. This was a heinous crime. Ruth Pyne was a victim.”
Editor note: Last image was dated 03/02/2022 per Michigan DOC website. In that photo his uniform contains orange shoulder stripes, which is standard in Michigan. The early photo has dark blue shoulder stripes, the purpose of which is not understood.)
2f
Last reviewed June 2025
Reblog
r/61
Post 1526
Dustin Edward Halstead, Florida inmate H52364. born 1993, incarceration intake March 2018 at age 25, scheduled for release August 2028
Vehicular Manslaughter, Leaving Crash Scene where a Death has Occurred
In January 2018, nearly four years after the incident, Halstead was convicted.
Workers were finishing construction work on South Florida Avenue in Lakeland in the early hours of the morning on July 23, 2014. Workers were pulling up cones to move to another work site down the road when a worker he was struck and killed by Dustin Halstead, who was driving home after drinking at three different bars.
At the end of a week-long trial, jurors convicted Halstead vehicular homicide and leaving the scene of a crash involving death. Halstead was facing 45 years in prison.
Halstead went to three different Lakeland bars, consuming a couple of drinks at each location – he closed his last tab at 1:45 a.m. As Halstead’s vehicle approached the construction zone, his vehicle drifted to the left. He struck several construction barrels before hitting a worker just after 2 a.m.
Another worker heard the collision and ran over to see a dark, boxy vehicle driving away from where another's worke's body was laying in the roadway. Halstead did not stop.
Halstead’s girlfriend was in the vehicle with him at the time of the crash. She was looking at her phone when she felt the impact and did not see construction barrels or a human.
After reading an article about how someone died on South Florida Avenue, the girl friend sent the news item to Halstead – who told her not to tell anyone.
But the girlfriend had already mentioned it to her roommate, who called the Lakeland Police Department. When police contacted the girlfriend, she confirmed Halstead was driving that night and told officers where he could be found.
Police found dents and blood spatter on the hood of Halstead’s vehicle. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement confirmed the DNA matched that of of the victim, Shelby Shull.
Halstead told detectives that he remembered hitting traffic barrels but didn’t stop because he didn’t think that was a crime.
The prosecution argued at trial that the DNA proves Shull’s body was on top of the hood, which was directly in Halstead’s line of sight.
But the defense argued the DNA was transferred from a construction barrel – that Halstead drove by after Shull had been hit by another car. When Halstead ran into the barrels, they claimed, the DNA ended up on his hood.
The prosecution reminded jurors there was testimony showing the barrels only weigh 30 pounds, and the denting on Halstead’s car was more consistent with a 200 pound victim. There was also a smear on hood, which could only have come from hitting Shull.
6y
Post 0146
Brock E Smith, Florida inmate G40336, born 1987, incarceration intake January 2020 at age 32, scheduled for release January 2028
Adult Sexual Intercourse with a 16-17 year old
In January 2020, Brock Smith had been already sentenced to eight years in state prison after he was found guilty of sending lewd images through social media to a minor, according to court records.
Smith stood again in front of a Judge to accept a plea deal for a charge he was facing for having sex with a minor. Smith was also sentenced to two years of sex offender probation, which will run consecutively with his previous 10-year probation sentencing. Smith will serve a total of 12 years in prison for both cases against him, according to court documents.
Smith was hired by Collier County Public Schools in 2011 and worked at Naples High School for six years before his Aug. 14, 2017 arrest. He also served as a football coach for the varsity football team, according to court documents.
He was arrested after an interview with investigators from the Collier County Sheriff’s Office and the Florida Department of Children and Families.
Smith told the investigators that he sent “nude images of himself” to a girl, who was 17 at the time, according to an arrest report.
Smith also told investigators that he had sexual intercourse with the girl in a bathroom, the arrest report states.
In May 2019, Smith pleaded no contest to felony charges of transmitting harmful material to a minor and using a computer service to seduce, solicit, lure or entice a child for pornography.
Last year, Smith’s defense attorney Shawn Nagle argued in a hearing that an interview with the Collier County Sheriff’s Office should have been suppressed because Smith was not read his Miranda rights prior to the interview.
Smith was interviewed by investigators at Naples High School during the summer when classes were not in session, according to court documents.
However, the Judge denied the motion to suppress evidence at a hearing and stated that “Merely being confronted with evidence of criminal activity did not turn this interview into a custodial interrogation requiring Miranda warnings.”
2f
Last reviewed June 2025
Reblog
r/46
Post 0145
Joshua Komisarjevsky, Connecticut Inmate 299047 (currently housed out-of-state – at an undisclosed location – as Pennsylvania inmate MQ5469), born 1980, incarceration intake at age 31, sentenced initially to death, commuted to life without parole.
Murder
On July 23, 2007, Joshua Komisarjevsky and Steven Hayes broke into the Petit family home after having targeted them when one of them noticed Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her 11-year-old daughter, Michaela, at a grocery store earlier that day. The individual had discreetly followed the mother-daughter duo home and returned later that evening with the other in the hopes of ending their financial strains, but things escalated. They actually hit Dr. Petit over the head with a baseball bat and tied him in the basement before proceeding to bound Michaela and 17-year-old Hayley to their respective beds.
In the morning, hours into holding the family hostage, Steven took Jennifer to a bank to withdraw $15,000 for them, unaware that she’d manage to alert a clerk about their situation. Thus, he raped and strangled her to death once they returned home, only to help Joshua douse the estate in gasoline and set it on fire soon after.
It later came to light that Joshua Komisarjevsky had sexually assaulted Michaela while the others were not at home and that both young girls died of smoke inhalation. Haley had managed to escape her bonds, but she couldn’t make it past the stairs. Both the assailants — Joshua and Steven — were eventually captured on the streets during their escape attempt.
In the morning, hours into holding the family hostage, Steven took Jennifer to a bank to withdraw $15,000 for them, unaware that she’d manage to alert a clerk about their situation. Thus, he raped and strangled her to death once they returned home, only to help Joshua douse the estate in gasoline and set it on fire soon after.
However, once the death penalty in Connecticut was abolished, they were both resentenced to six consecutive life terms without parole plus an additional 140 years behind bars. Since then, the two have been transferred to the Pennsylvania prison system as a part of an interstate agreement, meaning that they are out-of-state inmates.
Joshua Komisarjevsky did try to appeal his conviction on several grounds in connection to this home invasion-turned-murder case, but the State Supreme Court rejected in 2021 with a 7-0 Justice decision. We should also mention that in 2019, Steven claimed that he was undergoing hormone therapy in prison as a part of his transition. Steven did not state which pronouns he preferred but declared, “I’m a transgender. I was diagnosed at 16 with sexual identity disorder and my family never acknowledged it and it was never treated.”
The United States Supreme Court in December 2021 also declined to take up an appeal.
2f
Last reviewed June 2025
Reblog
r/51
Post 0144
David Bogdanov, Washington inmate 429555, born 1994, incarceration intake 2021 at age 27, scheduled release date not published
Murder
In September 2021, David Bogdanov was sentenced to 19½ years in prison in the murder of Nikki Kuhnhausen, a 17-year-old transgender teenager who went missing in 2019. Her body was later found on Larch Mountain in southwest Washington state.
A Clark County Washington Court jury found Bogdanov, guilty of second degree murder and malicious harassment, now legally called a hate-crime offense in Washington, in Kuhnhausen’s death.
His sentence was at the top of the range for the two crimes — 234 months for second-degree murder and 12 months for malicious harassment to run concurrently.
The Defense attorney requested a low-end sentence of 11 years, noting that Bogdanov had no prior criminal history. Bogdanov claimed self-defence at the trial. He testified that when he pushed Kuhnhausen away and yelled at her to get out of his car, she lunged for a loaded gun he had near the driver’s seat. Bogdanov said he wrapped a phone charger around her shoulders to pull her away, but the cord slipped up around her neck.
After Kuhnhausen’s death, Bogdanov dumped her body down the hillside of Larch Mountain, booked a one-way flight to Ukraine and called a friend to “get rid” of his car, according to trial testimony. He returned to the U.S. about six weeks later.
The prosecution argued throughout the trial that Bogdanov strangled Kuhnhausen because she was transgender.
In explaining his sentencing decision, the Judge noted there was an element of predation in the case because Kuhnhausen was 17 and Bogdanov was 25 at the time. Bogdanov also admitted during the trial to giving Kuhnhausen alcohol.
The judge also pointed to testimony that Bogdanov dumped Kuhnhausen’s body, left the country and lied to police during the six months she was considered missing.
2f
Last reviewed June 2025
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Post 0576
Devon M Vanderwege, New York inmate 18B1329, born 1999, incarceration intake May 2018 at age 18, scheduled for release May 2034
Manslaughter
In May 2018, after denying a defense request for youthful offender status, an Erie County Court Judge sentenced Devon VanDerwege to 20 years in prison for his admitted role in the death of a toddler in the Town of Marilla in 2017.
VanDerwege, 18, pleaded guilty earlier to first degree manslaughter in the March 2017 fatal beating of 2-year-old Ethan Bigham inside the Town of Marilla trailer home in which both lived, along with several other adults and children. VanDerwege, investigators say, had recently moved into the home after being kicked out of his own.
Bigham, who suffered blunt-force trauma, died two days later when he was removed from life support.
In court, prosecuting attorney Colleen Curtin Gable acknowledged that as the investigation into the toddler's death continued, the story kept changing and blame was shifted but, ultimately, it was the defendant who carried out the assault.
Curtin Gable also argued against a defense request to grant youthful offender status to VanDerwege, saying any 17-year-old knows it's wrong to inflict head injuries on a toddler as he did.
Defense attorney Kevin Spitler expressed his disappointment following the sentence, arguing that numerous conditions including VanDerwege's difficult background - which included being kicked out of his own home - should have been taken into account.
The teenager lived in the trailer home with a friend, the latter's girlfriend, two other adults and four children including the victim. VanDerwege, it was described, helped out as an informal babysitter for the kids.
Judge James Bargnesi acknowledged VanDerwege's difficult situation but said in court that what he did to the toddler was "not a one-second mistake."
3v
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Post 1516
Austin Prather, Kentucky inmate 344629, born 2003, incarceration intake March 2026 at age 23, sentenced to life without parole
Murder, Robbery, Tampering with Evidence
In March 2026, a Science Hill Kentucky man was sentenced to spend the rest of his life behind bars following a formal sentencing in Pulaski Circuit Court for the 2023 shooting deaths of his father and grandfather.
In accordance with the plea, Prather received a sentence of Life Without the Possibility of Parole.
The violent investigation began on November 7, 2023, when Pulaski County Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to a gunshot complaint in the Science Hill area. Investigators discovered that Prather had shot and killed his grandfather, Ardyth “Ray” Prather, Jr., in his driveway, and then proceeded to kill his father, Ardyth “Trae” Prather III, at a neighboring residence.
Prather also attacked his grandmother, Joanne Prather, who was both shot and stabbed during the incident. She was able to flee to a neighbor's home and identify her grandson as the assailant before being rushed for medical treatment.
In addition to the life sentence, Prather received concurrent sentences of twenty years for the attempted murder and robbery charges, and five years for tampering with physical evidence.
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Reblog with additional updated DOC mugshot.
r/83
Post 0141
Kyle Sheppard, Ohio inmate A732434; born 1983, incarceration intake February 2017 at age 34; Sentenced 15 years to life; eligible for parole September 2027
Murder
The case arose when Katie Sheppard, 29, who worked for a dry-cleaning business, failed to report to work on Friday, Nov. 2, 2012. A friend, concerned for her safety, went with her boss to her home and found the house locked.
That evening, an officer found her body, which police said had been “posed” with the hands folded across each other, on the front porch of her home. She had been strangled with a belt and wrapped in a blanket.
Court documents show the couple had been married for four years and had been together since high school. The relationship had soured and Kyle Sheppard discovered his wife was having an affair with a co-worker.
On the morning of the murder, Kyle Sheppard — a former U.S. Marine — sent an angry text message with sexually explicit language to his wife’s lover.
Sheppard, originally from Windsor, Ontario, worked at an auto-parts supplier in Toledo and had called that morning to say he would not be at work.
The dual citizen drove into Canada via Windsor after the killing, prompting authorities in the province to issue an alert for his vehicle. Two days later, he called police from a motel in Saguenay, Que., north of Quebec City and surrendered. He also confessed to them.
Sheppard then spent several years in custody in Montreal fighting extradition to the United States. In part, he argued his statements to police should have been excluded and that he could face the death penalty.
The extradition judge ultimately did find police had violated his constitutional rights by interrogating him, and excluded the confession evidence. However, the Superior Court judge ruled in October 2013 that there was still enough reason to extradite him on murder charges. Canada agreed to the extradition in April 2014.
He was finally handed over to American authorities after the Quebec Court of Appeal refused to overturn the extradition order.
2f
Last reviewed June 2025
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Post 0140
Joshua Michael Bauman, Michigan Inmate 646881, born 1988, incarceration intake May 2021 at age 33, sentenced to life;
Homicide, Home Invasion, Assault
Spent 2 years, 9 months in pre-conviction jail confinement, credit granted towards sentence.
Authorities say Bauman broke into an apartment and started shooting at a Policeman, who was visiting a 29-year-old woman in Clyde Township, near Port Huron Michigan.
The officer, Joel Wood, 45, a 22-year veteran of the Port Huron Police Department was killed.
Bauman then fled the area but police found him at a gas station about 75 miles from the scene of the crime, a few hours later.
At trial, his ex-wife testified that she feared him.
A motion for a new trial because of ineffective representation was denied.
2f
Last reviewed June 2025
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r/71
Post 1525
Before and After
Ethan Alexander O'Brien, Florida inmate P93006, born 2004, incarceration intake April 2026 at age 21, scheduled for release March 2039
Homicide, Obstruction of a Crime Investigation
In April 2026, a 21-year-old Cantonment Florida man was sentenced to 15 years in prison for the accidental fatal shooting of a 16-year-old boy in April 2024.
A judge sentenced Ethan O'Brien after he was convicted in February 2026 on charges of Manslaughter with a Firearm and Tampering with Evidence. O'Brien received over two years -- 742 days -- credit for time served in the local jail. Upon his release from prison, he will serve 15 years of probation.
According to an arrest report, O'Brien -- who was age 19 at the time -- pulled a gun from his auto trunk that was described as an AR-style rifle. Witnesses said that O'Brien seemed to be intoxicated.
While showing the gun off to partygoers, O'Brien accidentally discharged the gun, according to the report. A bullet fatally struck the 16-year-old boy -- Bryson Allen -- in the chest.
O'Brien immediately left the scene. Allen was pronounced dead on scene.
The Escambia County Sheriff's Office's determined the shooting to be accidental.
6y
Post 0139
“Fashion Forward”
You will certainly turn heads with this very chic fashion ensemble – featuring a classic eye-catching orange suit with subtle white alternate tone highlights, coupled with a wide high-waist accentuating contrasting black stun-belt accessorized with grip restraint mitts; and topped off with smart but sleek slip on shoes with elegant but understated short-chain ankle shackles to add that oh so certain je-ne-sais-quoi look.
You can be assured that this look will be in demand among the smart set this season!
(Personal security escorts are included.)
Model: Robert Charles Gleason, 1970-2013; executed by electrocution in Virginia.
In 2008, Gleason was sentenced to life in prison for the 2007 murder of Michael Kent Jamerson (March 13, 1953 – May 8, 2007) in Amherst County, Virginia. Gleason murdered Jamerson to cover up his involvement in a drug gang. In 2009, while serving a life sentence at Wallens Ridge State Prison, Gleason had become frustrated with the DOC because they refused to move out his new, severely mentally ill cellmate, Harvey Gary Watson (September 11, 1945 – May 8, 2009). Watson had been serving a 100-year sentence for a shooting spree on August 11, 1983, which resulted in one death and three injuries. Gleason hog-tied, beat and strangled 63-year-old Watson, on the second anniversary of Jamerson’s death. Gleason pleaded guilty. In court and media interviews, Gleason vowed to continue killing if not given a death sentence.
Gleason also claimed to have killed other people before his incarceration for Jamerson’s murder. He said he was paid to kill some of the alleged victims, while he killed others for angering him.
While awaiting sentencing at Red Onion State Prison, a highly secure prison for the state’s most dangerous inmates in remote southwestern Virginia, Gleason strangled 26-year-old Aaron Cooper (September 27, 1983 – July 28, 2010) through wire fencing that separated their individual cages in a prison yard on July 28, 2010. Cooper had been serving a 34-year sentence for robbery.
Gleason was subsequently sentenced to death, voluntarily waived his appeals, and received his request. He chose the electric chair over lethal injection.
2f
Last reviewed February 2022
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r/124