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Tag: Essex County

  • Richard Codey, former New Jersey governor, dies at 79, his family says

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    Richard Codey, the former governor of New Jersey and the state’s longest-serving lawmaker, died early Sunday morning, his family announced. 

    Codey died peacefully at his home after a brief illness. He was 79. 

    “Our family has lost a beloved husband, father and grandfather — and New Jersey lost a remarkable public servant who touched the lives of all who knew him,” the family said in a Facebook post

    Codey, a Democrat, became acting governor of the Garden State following the resignation of Gov. Jim McGreevey in Nov. 2004. He served out the remainder of McGreevey’s term, which ended in 2006. 

    Acting New Jersey Governor Richard J. Codey speaks during a news conference at the Statehouse in Trenton, New Jersey, on Friday, April 13, 2007.

    Jeff Zelevansky/Bloomberg via Getty Images


    “He lived his life with humility, compassion and a deep sense of responsibility to others. He spoke the truth when others wouldn’t and fought tirelessly for the people of New Jersey during his record-setting 50 years in the Legislature. He made friends as easily with Presidents as he did with strangers in all-night diners,” his family said.

    Codey was first elected to the New Jersey State Legislature in 1973 as an assemblyman representing communities in Essex and Morris counties. He served as a state senator from 1984 until his retirement in 2024. He had returned to the state senate when his term as governor ended.

    Gov. Phil Murphy, Gov.-elect Mikie Sherrill laud Codey

    “If anybody embodied our proud New Jersey values, it was Governor Dick Codey,” Gov. Phil Murphy said in a statement, in part. “He proved that every single day of his life. Whether as Governor or as the longest-serving lawmaker in New Jersey history, Dick built a safer, healthier future for all of us. From championing funding for mental health care and stem cell research to advancing smoke-free indoor spaces in New Jersey, Dick protected every one of our communities and sought to cultivate the potential of every one of our neighbors.

    Gov.-elect Mikie Sherrill said Codey was the genuine article in every way.

    “Today, our state lost a leader and a great public servant in Governor Dick Codey. As governor, in the assembly, and in the state senate, he used his power to expand mental health resources, implement stronger gun safety laws to protect communities, and bolster substance abuse treatment and prevention programs. He truly cared about the people he served,” Sherrill said.

    “I am lucky to call Governor Codey a mentor and a friend. He was there from the beginning when I decided to run for Congress, and again when I decided to run for governor, and I will always carry with me his deep belief that the future of our state is worth fighting for. I’m sending my deepest condolences to his wife, children, and grandchildren whom he loved dearly. Governor Codey will be sorely missed,” she added.

    U.S. Sen. Andy Kim, others reflect on Codey’s legacy

    “Dick Codey understood the importance of service, especially when it was unexpected. He was driven by his values and used that drive to make our state a better place. His legacy is one we’re all a part of and we all benefit from,” Kim said in a post on X.

    Essex County Executive Joseph N. DiVincenzo Jr. also offered his condolences to Codey’s family.

    “Richard Codey was a prominent figure in Essex County and New Jersey for over a half century … I respected Dick for his ability to get things done and how he always was a staunch advocate for his constituents. I am glad that we dedicated Codey Arena in his honor in 2005 while he was alive so that he could see how much people appreciated him and the impact he had,” DiVincenzo said.

    The Union County Board of Commissioners said Codey “devoted his life to public service, spending decades advocating for the people of New Jersey with integrity, compassion, and an unwavering commitment to doing what was right — particularly for those who were most vulnerable. His leadership, humility, and courage left a lasting mark on our state and set an example for generations of public servants.”

    Codey’s family said information about his services will be shared in the coming days. 

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  • Afghan man living in Lowell speaks about ICE detention

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    LOWELL — When Ihsanullah Garay was delivering food on Sept. 14, he found himself struggling to find the Starbucks he was being sent to pick up from in Methuen.

    He asked the first people he saw for directions, a man and a woman sitting in a car. The man pointed Garay in the right direction, he told The Sun Monday morning, and Garay thanked him and started walking away. Then, the two people started asking Garay questions about his nationality, and where he was born. Garay is from Afghanistan, arriving in the U.S. in the spring of 2021 on a student visa to get a doctorate in finance.

    “I said, ‘Brother, this is not related to you. You helped me, I said thank you, that’s it,’” Garay said.

    Garay then tried to walk away, but he said the man shouted at him, and continued questioning Garay’s nationality, while Garay maintained that he was in the country legally.

    After more back and forth, Garay said the man finally identified himself as a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, and ask him to produce identification, which Garay had in his car, along with an ID badge from a former job.

    Garay was soon placed in handcuffs, beginning a more than monthlong ordeal in ICE custody that brought him to three different ICE facilities in three states before he was released on bond last month. After he arrived back in Lowell, where he has been living with his cousin, Abdul Ahad Storay, Garay took some time to settle and work to get back on track with his ongoing treatment for brain cancer.

    On Monday, he sat down with The Sun in Storay’s computer store in Downtown Lowell to give his firsthand account of his experience.

    Garay said that when he was placed in handcuffs, he tried to explain his situation to the ICE agents, to no avail.

    “I said, ‘What are you doing? I have brain cancer. I have a work permit, I have Social Security, I have everything. What are you doing?’ He said nothing,” said Garay.

    Garay’s first stop was the ICE field office in Burlington, where many of those detained by the agency in Greater Lowell are being brought. Since the spring, allegations of extremely poor conditions inside the building have been made by detainees and their attorneys, as it is designed primarily as an office building, not a long-term detention facility.

    Garay could not speak much to the conditions inside, as he said he was only at the facility for roughly an hour before he was transferred to another facility in Rhode Island. In that short time, though, Garay said he was asked by ICE officials for proof that he has brain cancer, which he was able to show them through his MyChart app when they brought him his phone, which they had confiscated along with his ID and other belongings. When the ICE officials saw the medical documents, Garay said they seemed shocked he was telling the truth.

    While still in Burlington, Garay said he suffered a couple medical episodes which lasted about two minutes, though he was unsure whether these were seizures or something else stemming from his brain cancer.

    Garay spent about 28 days in the facility in Rhode Island, and at one point he said similar medical episodes would occur on a near nightly basis, bringing him to the point of needing a wheelchair to move around, but the medical care available at the facility was not sufficient, he said. After he was moved to Georgia, where he was given the Oct. 21 court hearing that resulted in his release, Garay said he experienced more of the same.

    “They have no neurosurgeon, they have no oncologist, they have no neurologist, nothing,” said Garay.

    Through all of this, Garay was missing key appointments in the course of his cancer treatment. He was supposed to start a new medication at a Sept. 24 appointment at Boston Medical Center, but he missed it while in custody and was not able to start the medication on time. Even after reaching out to his doctors, Garay said the medicine did not arrive before he was moved to Georgia. In the meantime, he said he was prescribed Keppra, an anti-seizure medication he was supposed to take in the morning and evening, but it was only ever brought to him for the night dose while he was in Rhode Island.

    In Georgia, Garay said he saw a slight improvement to that end, as they gave him both daily doses of the anti-seizure medication, though at that facility he still lacked the medical care he needed.

    After he was released on bond, the police brought Garay to the airport, where he was denied boarding because his identification had been taken by ICE in Massachusetts, despite reassurance from the police and ICE he would be allowed on the plane.

    After Storay called local police to help his cousin, Garay was brought to Jacksonville, Florida, where he got on a bus for the multi-day journey back north to Lowell.

    Now home, Garay is doing much better. He is able to walk around without the need for a wheelchair, and his cancer treatment is moving back on track after he met with his doctors at the end of October. His next appointment is an MRI at Boston Medical Center later this month, and he has multiple other appointments scheduled with his doctors before the end of the year.

    Still, his ICE ordeal continues with a court hearing on Dec. 11 in Georgia, but Garay and his attorneys are working on getting it moved up to Massachusetts. He hopes to remain in the U.S., not only because of his ongoing medical treatment, but also because both he and Storay, himself a U.S. citizen, would not be safe returning to Afghanistan, which fell back to Taliban control in 2021, months after Garay left the country.

    As his home country fell, and the U.S. completed the withdrawal of its military forces, Garay applied for asylum that August on top of his student visa, fearing what would happen to him if he were to return.

    “If the U.S. will give me nationality, I will accept it. If not, I will go somewhere else,” said Garay. “When the Taliban suddenly came, I had no choice but to apply for asylum.”

    Garay’s asylum case has been pending ever since. So when Temporary Protected Status was offered to Afghan citizens living in the U.S. the following spring after the Taliban retook control, Garay did not apply for TPS due to his open asylum case. TPS for Afghanistan was terminated in July this year.

    “They (ICE) told me my visa expired in September 2021. I asked them how this was possible when I came in April,” said Garay.

    Even without the Taliban, Garay said he could not return because Afghanistan lacks the medical infrastructure he needs to treat his cancer.

    Now that he is back in Lowell, Garay is looking for other work that is not food delivery.

    In addition to delivering food, Garay said he had been working at Lahey Hospital as a receptionist, but he left that job just a couple weeks before his arrest after they could not give him enough hours.

    Friends of Garay also left Afghanistan after he did, but some went to Canada, he said, and once there they asked him to join them.

    “I said no … I don’t want to be in some country illegally, so that is why I am here,” said Garay.

    Garay credited Storay for getting him back to Lowell.

    “He knows my situation. Nobody can even imagine my situation … He also knows what he has been spending on me. Only he knows,” said Garay.

    An ICE spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment Friday. When previously asked about Garay’s case in October, ICE Boston spokesperson James Covington said in a statement Garay is “an illegal alien from Afghanistan,” and claimed he lawfully entered the U.S. in April 2021 with permission to remain until Sept. 7, 2021.

    “However, he violated the terms of his lawful admission when he refused to leave the country. Garay will remain in ICE custody pending the outcome of his removal proceedings,” Covington said in the Oct. 11 statement.

    In addition to Garay’s current work permit, Storay was also able to show The Sun Garay’s original student visa, which was issued in April 2021 and expired one year later, seven months after Covington claimed it did.

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    Peter Currier

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  • Salem Pantry to increase regional food storage capacity through $2 million grant

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    SALEM — The Salem Pantry will soon lease a 20,000-square-foot warehouse with five times the food storage capacity of the organization’s current warehouse with the help of a $2 million grant.

    The new warehouse, strategically located on Highland Avenue at the border of Peabody and Lynn, will provide warehouse space, cold storage, and distribution infrastructure for up to 20 additional emergency food distribution partners in lower Essex County, according to the Greater Boston Food Bank.


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    By Michael McHugh |Staff Writer

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  • ICE arrests Afghan man with brain cancer living in Lowell, despite work authorization

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    LOWELL — When Ihsanullah Garay, 38, came to the U.S. from Afghanistan in the spring of 2021, he brought with him dreams of obtaining his doctorate in finance.

    Those dreams carried him to a university in New York City, his cousin, Abdul Ahad Storay, told The Sun. In the months following Garay’s arrival in the U.S., American troops in his home country would withdraw from the nearly two-decade-long war there and the oppressive Taliban regime would swiftly retake control.

    In the months that followed that, Garay would be diagnosed with a brain tumor, for which his doctors wanted urgent surgery.

    “I was there for his surgery. He needed chemotherapy, radiation and the doctors said he needed somebody to take care of him,” said Storay, who owns Lowell Computer on Central Street.

    Storay brought his cousin to live with him in Lowell while Garay underwent daily chemotherapy at Lowell General Hospital. Garay would eventually move back to New York, but after about six months, Storay said his cousin returned to Lowell because he felt he still couldn’t survive on his own. Garay got his own place this time, and worked by delivering food through apps like DoorDash and Grubhub to support himself.

    On Sept. 14, Garay was in the middle of delivering an order in Methuen when he got lost and had to ask for directions, Storay said, so he asked a man sitting in a car.

    “The guy asked him to show his documents, and when [Garay] argued, he said he was an [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] agent,” said Storay.

    Storay said his cousin was in the U.S. legally, has work permits, a driver’s license and had applied for asylum. He fears that Garay will be returned to Afghanistan, where there is a written threat against him by the Taliban due to him having been an employee of the U.S.-backed government as a risk manager for a bank in the country.

    In a statement to The Sun on Saturday, ICE Boston spokesperson James Covington called Garay “an illegal alien from Afghanistan” and confirmed his Sept. 14 arrest in Methuen.

    “Garay lawfully entered the United States April 30, 2021 with permission to remain until September 7, 2021; however, he violated the terms of his lawful admission when he refused to leave the country. Garay will remain in ICE custody pending the outcome of his removal proceedings,” said Covington. “Under the leadership of President Trump and [Homeland Security] Secretary [Kristi] Noem, aliens residing in the United States unlawfully will be arrested and removed. ICE encourages aliens to self-deport using the [Customs and Border Protection] Home application.”

    Storay said his cousin had likely been brought to the ICE field office in Burlington before being sent to a facility in Rhode Island, where an immigration law firm had been representing him pro bono. Just a few hours after ICE sent its statement to The Sun, Storay said he learned his cousin was moved to a facility in Florida that same day.

    Storay also showed The Sun Garay’s current work authorization card, which was issued in  November 2024 and remains valid until 2029. While in custody, Storay said Garay is missing critical scans and appointments with his oncologist as he continues his fight with brain cancer.

    Storay is also from Afghanistan, but he arrived in the U.S. in 2017 and got his citizenship about a year and a half ago. While some in the Greater Lowell area from Afghanistan “are afraid to come out of [their] homes” amid the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, Storay said any worries he has about retaliation for speaking up are outweighed by his concern for his cousin.

    “It’s for him. I did not feel any worry. I had to do something for him,” said Storay.

    Garay was scheduled to appear in the Chelmsford Immigration Court on Oct. 16, Storay said, so when an immigration officer called him from the airport as they brought Garay to Florida, Storay questioned the timing.

    “They said it was because he needed medical facilities there,” said Storay, questioning why they didn’t just bring him to a hospital in Boston.

    “When you talk to him, you will feel he is dying at any time,” Storay later said of his cousin. “I don’t know how they don’t see that.”

    Storay said Monday afternoon he has not heard from his cousin since that phone call on Saturday.

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    Peter Currier

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  • Essex Tech Larkin Fall Gala to be hosted at newly rebuilt Larkin Building

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    DANVERS — Essex North Shore Agricultural & Technical School will host its Larkin Fall Gala on Saturday, Sept. 27, in the newly rebuilt Larkin Building.

    With many guests being allowed into the Larkin Building for the very first time since its rebuilding, the event will feature a cocktail reception, live music, a silent auction, and raffle prizes. Essex Tech leadership, staff, alumni and community members will be in attendance.


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    By Michael McHugh | Staff Writer

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  • Early voting begins for Mass. primary

    Early voting begins for Mass. primary

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    BOSTON — Massachusetts voters can go to the polls beginning this weekend to nominate candidates for Congress and a handful of contested legislative and county races as early voting gets underway ahead of the state primary.

    From Saturday to Aug. 30, cities and towns will allow registered voters to cast early ballots ahead of the Sept. 3 primary. No excuse or justification is required to cast a ballot ahead of time. Voters can also vote by mail, but must request their ballots by a Monday deadline, according to the Secretary of State’s office. Saturday is the deadline to register to vote.

    Turnout is generally low in state primaries, but the lack of contested races means it could drop to new lows with voters more focused on the November crucial presidential election.

    Nevertheless, good government groups are urging voters to take advantage of the state’s expanded voting options to cast their ballots ahead of the primary.

    “With early voting and vote by mail, we have more options for how we choose to cast a ballot and pick our state leaders,” Geoff Foster, executive director of Common Cause Massachusetts, said in a statement. “We encourage everyone to get out and vote before the long weekend.”

    Topping the ballot are three Republican contenders — attorney and cryptocurrency advocate John Deaton, Quincy City Council President Ian Cain and researcher and engineer Bob Antonellis — who are facing off in the GOP primary for a shot at challenging incumbent Democratic U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who has no primary challenger.

    None of the state’s nine Democratic congress members are facing primary challengers, including Reps. Seth Moulton of Salem, and Lori Trahan of Westford. Republicans didn’t field any candidates in 3rd or 6th Congressional district races, ensuring that Trahan and Moulton will win another two years in Congress.

    There are also a handful of contested state legislative primaries, including a rematch between incumbent Democratic Rep. Francisco Paulino of Methuen and Marcos A. Devers of Lawrence in the 16th Essex District race. There are no Republicans running for the House seat.

    Most of the largely Democratic state legislators representing the north of Boston region are facing no primary challengers, and few Republicans are running for the seats.

    On a county level, former Governor’s Councilor Eileen Duff of Gloucester is facing off against Navy veteran Joseph Michael Gentleman III in the Democratic primary for a six-year term as the Southern Essex County Register of Deeds. The winner will fill a vacancy left by former Register John O’Brien, a Democrat who retired on Dec. 31 after 47 years in the post.

    Incumbent Essex County Clerk of Courts Thomas Driscoll will try to fend off a challenge from former Beverly Councilor James FX Doherty on the Democratic ballot. The clerk oversees the superior courts in Salem, Lawrence and Newburyport.

    More than 4.9 million people are eligible to vote in the Sept. 3 primary, elections officials say. The majority, about 63%, are not affiliated with a political party.

    Under the Massachusetts system of open primaries, so-called “un-enrolled” or independent voters can choose a Republican or Democratic ballot.

    Registered Democrats can vote only in the Democratic primary, while Republicans can vote only on the GOP ballot. Libertarians, the state’s other major party, can only vote on their ballot.

    Secretary Of State Bill Galvin is recommending that voters check their city or town’s early voting schedule, and make a plan to vote. He noted that many local election offices have limited hours on Fridays.

    “With the primaries being held on the day after Labor Day, some voters may prefer to vote by mail or to vote early, especially if they have children going back to school that day,” Galvin said in a statement. “The early voting period gives you the chance to vote on whichever day you prefer, at your convenience.”

    Voters also can look up locations and times on the Secretary of State’s website: www.MassEarlyVote.com.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Nutley hit and run victim with ‘love for life’ mourned at vigil

    Nutley hit and run victim with ‘love for life’ mourned at vigil

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    PATERSON, New Jersey (WABC) — Natalie Perlaza did not just lose her little brother, her little brother was taken from her.

    “He was just outgoing, and nothing’s going to bring that back. Nothing’s going to bring him back,”: she said.

    His name is Wiston Perlaza, but his family knew him as ‘Bebe.’ He epitomized a love for life, but at 22, it is all gone. To say the sudden loss is crushing for everyone at the vigil is an understatement.

    Authorities say Wiston was killed in a hit and run in Nutley, New Jersey this past Wednesday.

    He was hit while walking with a date on Valentine’s Day – she survived.

    Wiston’s mother can’t muster up the words but has to imagine her son is now wearing a smile up in heaven, where she hopes the balloons from the vigil end up. Knowing he won’t be coming back to his home in Paterson, his older brother is holding the weight of the world.

    Wiston would have celebrated his 23rd birthday this Monday – and this is not the gathering his family or friends expected to have. With heavy hearts, they celebrated his life.

    “It just feels weird without him. It just feels like I can still call him, but I can’t anymore,” said high school friend Anderson Lopez.

    Best friends since high school, Lopez says Wiston, a mechanic, dreamed of owning his own shop – dreams that were infectious.

    “Even if he didn’t know you, he treated you as a friend. He’d always feel like home,” Lopez adds.

    This home – forever changed. The only solace the family says it now has is news of an arrest from police, though the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office won’t yet confirm that.

    “It’s a small victory, it’s a small win – and I’m glad he’s off the streets,” said Wiston’s older brother, Erick Ferrer.

    ALSO READ | 74-year-old woman dies after being hit by falling bricks from brownstone in Brooklyn

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  • Century 21 Cedarcrest Realty Invites Public to Participate in Annual Easter Seals  “Walk With Me” Fundraiser on April 8

    Century 21 Cedarcrest Realty Invites Public to Participate in Annual Easter Seals “Walk With Me” Fundraiser on April 8

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    Area Residents and Companies May Join or Support the Caldwell Real Estate Agency’s Team to Fund Critical Services for the Disabled

    Press Release



    updated: Apr 7, 2017

    Representatives from Century 21 Cedarcrest Realty will be at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. on the morning of April 8 to participate in the annual Easter Seals Walk with Me fundraising event. Century 21 is a national sponsor of the organization and Century 21 Cedarcrest, located in Caldwell, N.J. participates every year. The agency is encouraging its customers, business associates and local companies to walk or run that day, or to donate to the real estate office’s team to boost its fundraising efforts on behalf of Easter Seals.

    “We encourage our customers and friends to join us that day for such a worthy cause, or to donate to our team page to help Century 21 Cedarcrest Realty continue to make a difference in the lives of others,” said broker owner John Sass. “Easter Seals provides vital services to disabled children and adults in our communities and we are honored to participate.”

    We encourage our customers and friends to join us that day for such a worthy cause, or to donate to our team page to help Century 21 Cedarcrest Realty continue to make a difference in the lives of others.

    John Sass, Broker owner

    There will be a one-mile family-friendly walk and a USATF-certified 5K run that day. Check-in is at 9:00 a.m., start time is 10:30 a.m. The event will go on, rain or shine. Anyone wishing to participate with Century 21 Cedarcrest or donate to its team can do so at http://bit.ly/2nDJZ70.

    Easter Seals provides services that help people learn to walk, talk and perform other skills essential to daily living; find fulfilling jobs; reach individualized goals early in life; age with dignity; and participate in camping and recreation programs.

    Century 21 Cedarcrest is active in several charitable endeavors throughout the year, including the U.S. Marines Toys for Tots toy drive and various Essex County initiatives to help the disadvantaged. For more information about the award-winning real estate agency, visit www.c21cedarcrest.net.

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    About Century 21 Cedarcrest Realty, Inc.
    Located in Caldwell, N.J., Century 21 Cedarcrest Realty, Inc. (Cedarcrest Realty) works with property buyers and sellers throughout northern New Jersey, including Morris, Essex, Passaic, and Bergen counties. Under the guidance of broker/owner John Sass, nearly 60 real estate agents and REALTORs® work in both residential and commercial real estate. Sass joined the CENTURY 21® Real Estate System as a real estate associate in 1983, and advanced to Management in 1987. He is a licensed broker in the State of New Jersey, as well as a graduate of the REALTOR® Institute (GRI).

    Source: Century 21 Cedarcrest Realty

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