Articles- Collected Articles For The Transgender Community

August 31, 2010

A look inside Istanbul’s transsexual brothels

Filed under: Articles — Administrator @ 8:45 pm

By Nicholas Dynan
Published: August 29, 2010 11:18 ET in Europe

CLICK HERE FOR THE PICTURES

ISTANBUL, Turkey — Near one of the busiest streets in Istanbul, a row of nondescript houses holds a secret unknown to most foreigners here. The houses are the work place of some of Istanbul’s transgender and transsexual sex workers.

Many of these prostitutes have been forced into the trade by lack of employment opportunities. In Turkey, transgender and transsexuals are often discriminated against, and for them, stable work is hard to find.

The women who work in this series of brothels are the lucky ones. They stand in sharp contrast to the thousands of transgendered and transsexual sex workers who are forced to walk the streets of Istanbul. Outside brothels, all prostitutes are vulnerable to police harassment, sexually-transmitted infections and violence.

Police cracked down on a transgender and transsexual quarter of the city in the 1990s, though prostitution is technically legal in Turkey. The government has ceased issuing new permits for sex workers and brothels, leaving most of the industry illegal and often dangerous.

For prostitutes working in the brothels, the houses provide not only a level of protection, but also a place to reconnect. While the women compete for clients, they also form bonds among one another.

You Say Loitering for Sex – I Say Just Hanging Out

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By Julia Dahl -Sunday, August 29th, 2010 11:40 pm

Are “prostitution free zones” and other new law enforcement tactics for snaring sex workers unconstitutional?

Are “prostitution free zones” and other new law enforcement tactics for snaring sex workers unconstitutional?

In late June I witnessed something unusual in New York City’s Midtown Community Court: a trial on a prostitution charge. Hundreds of people are arrested for a prostitution-related offense in Manhattan each year, but only a fraction challenge the arrest at trial.

This trial was even more interesting because the charge was not actually prostitution. The defendant, a woman, had not been caught in the act of agreeing to sex for money; rather, she had been charged with “loitering for the purpose of engaging in a prostitution offense,” a nebulous—some say unconstitutional—charge that allows police to arrest a man or woman they suspect is attempting to engage in prostitution. In New York, both charges are B misdemeanors that can carry a penalty of 15 to 90 days in jail.

The testimony of the arresting officer was just as intriguing. He told the court that, while sitting in an unmarked police vehicle early on the morning of May 21, he observed the defendant “engaging in conversation” with two men and “attempting to stop” another on the west side of midtown Manhattan, an area he testified is “frequented by prostitution.”

And that was pretty much it. The officer didn’t hear her say anything; nor did he ask any of the men he saw her talking to what she had said. That didn’t faze the assistant district attorney, who attempted to get condoms found in the defendant’s purse admitted as evidence. Judge Richard Weinberg rejected the request, and six weeks later, he rendered his verdict. I was there to witness the judgment.

“The people did not prove their case,” he said from the bench. “I find the defendant not guilty.”

The 25-year-old defendant—who, according to her Legal Aid attorney, Kate Mogulescu, had never before been arrested for prostitution—was visibly relieved.

Mogulescu, who has been assigned to most of midtown Manhattan’s prostitution cases since February, calls loitering for prostitution arrests both “arbitrary” and “discriminatory.” Still, although approximately 70 percent of her prostitution-related cases are actually loitering charges, she notes that in the past six months only four of almost 100 clients have chosen to fight the charge in court.

“A lot of my clients are really confused as to what they were actually arrested for,” says Mogulescu.

The problem seems to be recognized, at least, by the judges and DAs at the Midtown Community Court. During the three mornings I spent at MCC, the DA’s office allowed loitering for prostitution defendants with no prior prostitution arrests to plead to a disorderly conduct violation instead of a misdemeanor, and the judge then sentenced them to counseling, not incarceration. So, for many, it’s easier to just take the violation, pay a court fee, and put the embarrassing arrest behind them. But of course it remains on their record.

Mogulescu has made it her mission to fight what she calls such “suspicious” arrests, one by one. And she’s making headway.

Two weeks ago, Mogulescu got a not-guilty verdict for another woman with no record of prostitution who had been picked up for loitering for prostitution. And just a few weeks before that another defendant, this time a 21-year-old transgendered woman who was picked up early one morning in Manhattan’s West Village, was similarly cleared of charges after a trial. According to the woman, she was handcuffed by officers after a taxi driver stopped to ask if she needed a ride, and she leaned into his cab to say she was fine.

“These arrests are in danger of criminalizing constitutionally protected behavior,” says Mogulescu. “They’re set up to be immune from scrutiny and, traditionally, they’ve been unchallenged.”

High-Tech Vice

Before the Internet, vice cops had it relatively easy. Most cities had specific areas known for street prostitution where undercover officers posing as johns could chat up a lady, strike a deal to pay for a sex act, and then pull out the cuffs. But in the last decade, the oldest profession has “gone high-tech,” says Jaime Ayala, Deputy Chief of Police in Arlington, Texas.

Anyone who has perused the adult sections of Craigslist or Backpage knows that men and women (and boys and girls) advertise their sexual services online. What this means for police is a lot more legwork. At the same time, a rise in awareness about the ugly world of human trafficking, where women from abroad—and, in some cases, American children—are held hostage in brothels disguised as massage parlors, has shifted law enforcement focus and resources away from traditional vice work, according to many attorneys.

“These days, prostitution is a very difficult crime to catch and prove,” says Rachel Palmer, an assistant district attorney in Harris County, Texas. Palmer says she is seeing fewer and fewer traditional prostitution cases come across her desk as budgets dwindle and the profession “goes indoors.”

But sex work on the streets persists, and the failure of scattered efforts to legalize it around the U.S. demonstrates that it continues to carry unsavory associations, especially for people who live in areas frequented by prostitutes. It is often accompanied by drugs and violence.

So how do you address a problem with dwindling resources in the face of mounting neighborhood pressure? You either get really creative, or you cut corners—or both.

One solution has been so-called “Prostitution Free Zones (PFZs).” Portland, Oregon, for example, created PFZs in the late 1990s to clean up certain areas that were notorious for prostitution. According to Elizabeth Wakefield, Chief Attorney at Metropolitan Public Defenders in Portland, a person with a prior conviction for a prostitution-related offense could be arrested for simply being in the zone.

But almost as soon as the PFZs were created, they were challenged. Wakefield recalls that much of the litigation centered around the constitutional right to travel, along with due process and equal protection issues, since the city wasn’t always allowing exceptions for potentially mitigating excuses like medical appointments or family visits in the zones and “public defenders noticed that African-Americans and Latinos were more likely to be excluded.”

“The ordinances were very amorphous,” says Wakefield. “We would attack one reason and then they’d modify the statute.”

Washington, D.C. also created PFZs in 2006. But, according to Professor John Copacino of the Georgetown University Criminal Justice Clinic, the district “gets around the constitutionality” by making the zones temporary: they can be in effect for just 10 days at a time. Portions of the district’s downtown area were declared PFZs during the inauguration of Barack Obama in January 2009.

In Arlington, Texas, home to the Dallas Cowboys Stadium and site of the 2011 Superbowl, police have proposed what they called a “Prostitution Exclusion Zone“ in the downtown area. The City Council’s municipal committee is currently considering the proposal. According to Deputy Chief Ayala, the proposed zone is part of a project called Operation Spotlight, which began in 2006 and includes identifying habitual offenders and creating a public awareness campaign called “You Never Know” – referring to the fact that “you never know” whether the prostitute or john you’re talking to is a cop or not.

The proposed exclusion zone “isn’t going to fix anything,” says Arlington police spokeswoman Tiara Ellis Richard. “It’s just another tool for officers to use when dealing with this problem.”

But opponents of these zones say they make an officer’s job too easy.

“A Prostitution Free Zone allows the loitering standard to be so low that anyone who doesn’t look like they belong in a particular neighborhood – whether they’re a person of color, wearing a short skirt, or transgendered — they are rounded up,” says Cyndee Clay, Executive Director of Helping Individual Prostitutes Survive (HIPS) a non-profit group in Washington, D.C.

Georgetown’s Copacino also sees problems. Standing around, even propositioning potential (non-paying) sexual partners while wearing a short skirt and stilettos, is not illegal. “You can’t criminalize normal behavior, ” says Copacino.

The key question for law enforcement, however, is how to distinguish between normal behavior and “loitering for prostitution” or, as it’s called in Arlington, Texas, “manifestation of prostitution,” or in Oregon “unlawful prostitution procurement activities.” In 1999, the Supreme Court struck down a Chicago anti-gang statute that allowed police to arrest “suspected” gang members for loitering on city streets. In his majority opinion for Chicago v. Morales, Justice John Paul Stevens wrote that the Illinois law was “impermissibly vague” and that the “freedom to loiter for innocent purposes” was a constitutionally protected liberty.

Who Defines Innocence?

The operative words are “innocent purposes.” How do police determine what is innocent and what is, in effect, attempted prostitution? It depends on whom you ask. J.R. Ujifusa, an assistant district attorney assigned to a special Portland police unit on prostitution, argues that police are trained to tell the difference.

“The officers who cite these cases aren’t like a normal person,” says Ujifusa. “Their minds are trained. There are very small indications that both men and women look for to decide if that woman is working. The four officers I work with have a great amount of experience and have the ability to recognize those indicators.”

Elizabeth Wakefield, the Portland defense attorney who fought the city’s PFZs, says her office has been encouraging women to fight these charges. Like Mogulescu, she sees the arrests as somewhat arbitrary and subject to abuse. “One person’s prostitute is another person’s homeless hippie kid hanging out,” she says. Or perhaps a community college writing teacher – like 36-year-old Ann Marie Selby, who was reportedly detained last year after she missed the bus and decided to walk home in an area known for prostitution. She sued the city and received $5,000.

The problem, says Wakefield, is that the city is now issuing many of these charges as violations rather than crimes, which under Oregon law means that the defendants don’t qualify for court-appointed counsel who could encourage them to challenge the arrest.

“The more cynical among us would say that’s why they’re doing it,” says Wakefield. “But really, it’s about budget issues. If you have to decide who goes to jail—someone suspected of prostitution or someone arrested for DUI—most people in the community would say the DUI is more dangerous.”

New York City’s Mogulescu says the loitering for prostitution cases she sees are similarly not scrutinized: “For most arrests, officers have to talk to a D.A. who accesses the arrest and decides what charges to prosecute,” she says. “But for these arrests, and other ‘quality of life’ violations like marijuana possession, they just check off boxes so no one is screening to make sure the arrest is actually valid.”

The New York Police Department did not respond to requests for information and comment on loitering for prostitution arrests.

“A Reduction of Freedom”

On July 13, at New York City’s Midtown Community Court, Judge Marc Whiten announced his verdict in the case the 21-year-old transgendered woman arrested in the West Village. But before he pronounced her not guilty, he took a moment to express concern over the woman’s arrest: “I shudder to think that if we allow such convictions of such individuals that it would lead to a very worrisome concern, a reduction in our freedom.”

For the young woman, who asked that her name not be used, the experience of being arrested for a crime she says she did not commit shook her. . As a veteran of group homes and homelessness, she knows what it’s like to be desperate and vulnerable.

“I’ll admit, there have been times in the past where I’ve taken money” for sex, she says. “But that life is behind me. For someone like me, it’s hard to find a community. My community is in the Village. But now I’m afraid to go down there. I’m afraid if that cop sees me again, he’ll arrest me.”

Julia Dahl is a freelance writer and contributing editor to The Crime Report.

Everyday Jewish hero takes trans community in empowered directions

Filed under: Articles — Administrator @ 8:36 pm

August 22nd, 2010 10:12 pm PT
By Martin Rawlings-Fein, SF Judaism & LGBT Issues Examiner

When Yavanté Thomas-Guess walks into a room you know it, full of ideas and a sense of wit and charm, he is a real force with which to be reckoned. He is a co-chair of San Francisco Transgender Empowerment, Advocacy, and Mentorship (SF TEAM), a member of San Francisco’s HIV Prevention Planning Council, where he represents the African American trans community, a seminal member of the Transgender Issues Subcommittee of the UCSF Chancellor’s GLBT Committee and a proud Reform Jew.

Thomas-Guess is a driven man with a deep connection with the Divine. Born into a mixed family, he has an African American and Sephardi Jewish mother and a Cherokee and African American father. Of his family he says, “I didn’t grow as a mixed race person because my family never used labels to describe who we were or are. Self pride was established from the beginning…we were never forced to go one way or another.” This self pride is what carried Thomas-Guess to be come a prolific leader in the trans community. Though the road to leadership was more of a meandering path than a straight line.

Thomas-Guess started his transition from Female-to-Male in the late 1990s, on the job at a local Mission employment agency, but quickly felt uncomfortable with being seen as the “obvious next step in grasping for happiness” of a stone butch. He got a job working at an internet company where, “No one knew anything about me being a female… I didn’t out myself. My goal was to be a man.” Eventually, he found his way to working at UCSF with the Center of Excellence for Transgender Health (CoE) where he has thrown open his self imposed closet doors to help people in need.

The dual concepts of L’Dor V’Dor, from generation to generation, and Tikun Olam, repairing the world, drive Yavanté to be the best human being he can, and when asked about his insights on the human condition he stated, “My faith keeps me grounded and invested in making this world better. It reminds me daily that my life is not my own. It belongs to the people that struggled before me, and the ones that will come after I’m gone. I hope their lives will be better because I lived.” He grasps the impact that his life affords both the world and the next generation in a truly profound way.

One way his impact has been felt is through SF TEAM’s collaborative partnership with Jewish Vocational Services (JVS). the Transgender Law Center (TLC) and the San Francisco LGBT Community Center with their Transgender Economic Empowerment Initiative (TEEI). TEEI was the first ever employment collaborative to assist transgender people in finding sustainable work and economic advancement through trainings, networking, and mentoring. Thomas-Guess started his transgender career, of sorts, working for the collaborative as their Transgender Economic Development Coordinator. From there he went on to become involved with SF TEAM and their mentoring and empowerment projects and became their co-chair.

Through it all he has been the same person that his parents raised. He states simply, “I’ve realized that the female I was, has helped me to become the man that I am. I contribute many of my personal attributes to my female being and allowing that previous person to influence who I am today.” While some Female-to-Male trans people go to great lengths to hide their previous lives as women, Thomas-Guess integrates the many aspects of his journey through gender for a more holistic approach.

When asked about the legacy that he wishes to leave the world, Thomas-Guess responds, “I’m trying to create a legacy of realness and positivity…the concept of ‘paying it forward.’ I strongly believe that for every blessing you receive, you owe one to someone less fortunate than yourself. This debt can be paid in so many ways, time and effort, monetarily, a smile, kind words, etc…” His positivity is contagious, whether sitting with him in a conference room or at an outdoor cafe he is truly a thoughtful and authentic Jewish man.

August 6, 2010

Prop. 8 judge strikes down same-sex marriage ban

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Joe Garofoli, John Wildermuth,Demian Bulwa, Chronicle Staff Writers

(08-04) 14:34 PDT SAN FRANCISCO — When a judge struck down California’s ban on same-sex marriage Wednesday, he handed gay rights advocates a historic and invigorating victory, but also a temporary one in a long fight that may be heading toward a showdown at the U.S. Supreme Court.

Even as Chief U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker’s toppling of Proposition 8 set off hours of celebration in some quarters – with many gays and lesbians seeing the ruling as not just a validation of marriage rights, but of their lives in general – opponents planned to seek a reversal at the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Backers of the marriage ban said they were confident they would prevail in the end, and predicted that Walker’s decision would energize people who believe marriage should be reserved for one man and one woman, just as the ban had mobilized gay rights proponents.

One of those who hailed the decision was Kristin Perry of Berkeley, whose desire to marry her partner of 10 years, Sandy Stier, prompted the couple to sue over Prop. 8, along with two men from Burbank. The initiative was approved by 52 percent of voters in November 2008, overturning a state Supreme Court ruling six months earlier that extended marital rights to gays and lesbians.

Differing views on ruling
At a news conference just after Walker’s 136-page decision was released, Perry said, “Today, every American should be proud.

“For so long, Sandy and I and our family have been regarded as ‘less than,’ ‘unequal’ and not worthy of liberty and the pursuit of happiness under the law,” Perry said. “But this decision says that we are Americans, too. We too should be treated equally. Our family is just as loving, just as real and just as valid as everyone else’s.”

The emotional plea was rejected by Douglas Napier, an attorney who defended Prop. 8, as a distraction in a case that he said should have been about voters’ rights. He called the ruling, which was the result of a nonjury trial in January, a legal “bump in the road.”

“Those that want to uphold traditional family values are going to be outraged,” said Napier, of the Alliance Defense Fund of Scottsdale, Ariz. “The whole nation is watching, and the whole nation should be quaking to think that a single judge sitting in California can reverse the will of 7 million voters.”

Appeal next
On Wednesday, at least, the purely practical impact of the decision was limited, and gay and lesbian couples such as Perry and Stier were unable to rush to the altar. Walker attached a stay order to his ruling, freezing it for at least a few days until a separate hearing can be held on whether to allow same-sex marriages while the case is appealed.

The decision did not affect 18,000 gay and lesbian couples who wed before voters passed Prop. 8. Those unions are still legal.

But the broader legal and political repercussions are weighty, as the trial was the first ever held in federal court on the issue. Legal experts said that if Walker’s ruling is affirmed on appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court would almost certainly take up the case and establish law for the rest of the country.

If the appeals court reverses Walker’s decision and restores the ban, the experts said, the Supreme Court may leave the case alone.

The appeal to the Ninth Circuit could be decided within months – or the process could take more than a year.

“If the Ninth Circuit invalidates all of the laws of the Western states, that would be a momentous change that might require the Supreme Court to charge in,” UC Davis law Professor Vikram Amar said. “But if they uphold Prop. 8, they’re not changing the world.”

Ruling provides guidance
In the meantime, the ruling may provide a valuable template for proponents of same-sex marriage, said Margalynne Armstrong, a law professor at Santa Clara University.

“The decision puts forth an analysis that is so complete that it provides arguments for other people who are advocating for this in other states, and for other judges writing these decisions – even if this gets slapped down,” Armstrong said.

Five states and the District of Columbia allow gay and lesbian marriages. But not every effort to expand marriage has been a winner. In December, the New York Legislature voted down an attempt to legalize same-sex marriage.

Walker’s decision comes amid other stabs at momentum. Last month, a federal judge in Massachusetts overturned part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, ruling that it is unconstitutional to define marriage only as a union between a man and a woman.

Wednesday’s ruling leaves same-sex marriage advocates with a dilemma. While they won the case, the stay issued by Walker means it could be months or years before another gay or lesbian couple is married in California. And there is no guarantee that higher courts will agree with Walker’s ruling.

“The appeals court could take the case on an expedited basis or take two years or more to get to it,” said Geoff Kors, executive director of Equality California. “I don’t think we want to wait until 2014 or 2016 to get marriage equality in California.”

As a result, Kors said, same-sex marriage proponents will proceed with plans to put an initiative to repeal Prop. 8 on the November 2012 ballot, a measure that would instantly make same-sex marriage legal in California.

That would mean a commitment of more than $1 million to collect the 700,000 or so signatures needed to get the constitutional amendment on the ballot and tens of millions more for a campaign effort like the one in 2008.

Time to plan
The good news for same-sex marriage proponents is that they have more than a year to decide whether to make a push for a ballot measure, and preparations for a 2012 vote aren’t that different from what’s needed to gather financial support for defense of the upcoming appeal.

While public opinion isn’t supposed to play a role in legal decisions, Kors added, “we know judges read the newspapers.”

A Field Poll last month found that a majority of California’s registered voters approve of allowing same-sex marriage, which boosts the chances of a 2012 initiative.

The issue is a tricky one for politicians, including President Obama, who has said he opposes same-sex marriage but also opposes Prop. 8. It could play a pivotal role in the November election, as candidates in the state’s top races this year have widely different views.

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown praised Wednesday’s invalidation of Prop. 8, saying Walker “came to the same conclusion I did when I declined to defend it (as state attorney general): Proposition 8 violates the equal-protection guarantee of the 14th Amendment of the United States.”

Feeling ‘sense of security’
A spokesman for Republican Meg Whitman, who supported Prop. 8, said the “ruling is the first step in a process that will continue.”

The state’s U.S. Senate hopefuls also disagree. Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer praised the ruling, while Republican Carly Fiorina said that “the people of California spoke clearly on this issue at the ballot box in 2008.”

Stier, Perry’s partner, said Walker’s ruling is not the end of her fight but points “toward the final piece that we’ve been waiting for with as much patience as possible.”

“Tomorrow, I will wake up and have a normal day,” she said. “I’ll do things around the house. Check in on the kids, go to work, just like I do every other day. But tomorrow will feel different. Because tomorrow I will have a sense of security that I haven’t been able to experience in the past.”

E-mail the writers at jgarofoli@sfchronicle.com, jwildermuth@sfchronicle.com and dbulwa@sfchronicle.com.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/08/05/MNQS1EOR3D.DTL

This article appeared on page A – 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

August 5, 2010

Disco-Ball Dresses and Spandex

Filed under: Articles — Administrator @ 12:58 pm

A dispatch from transgender camp for kids.
By Bedford Hope / Monday, Aug. 2, 2010, at 10:07 AM ET / www.slate.com

The face of a young man in a baseball cap fills the screen at the center of a circle of 30 or so children. “It’s Johnny!” they yell, meaning Johnny Weir, the “flamboyant,” figure-skating Olympian.* The kids are part of an annual gathering of gender-variant and transgender kids—kids born boys who look and act like girls. Outside of this camp weekend, it’s rare for them to hear “how great I think you all are … being true to yourselves,” as Weir tells them. He says he loves the electric-blue spandex suit with the lime-green lightning bolt designed by one boy. He tells a 6-year-old that, no, he doesn’t have a girlfriend, but one day he would like to have a family of his own. And, yes, “Bad Romance” was his favorite song to skate to. “I’ve fallen,” he tells them, referring to the ice, not sin. “I’ve screwed up. The thing is just sparkle so much that nobody notices. Yeah, that’s it. Sparkle! We’ve got to sparkle!”

Welcome to the guarded world of families with gender-variant kids, where a word like sparkle can move you to tears. Started by a parent support group out of Children’s National Medical Center, this year the camp hosted 25 families and was held in a rural retreat a three-hour drive from Chicago. Most of the “Camp I Am” kids will one day end up somewhere in the GLBTQ spectrum—maybe cross-dressers, gender queer, or another term yet to be invented. But if past experience is any indication, the majority of our girly-boys will one day consider themselves straightforwardly gay. For the kids who turn out to be truly born in the wrong body, their parents will continue to wrestle with pronouns, possible hormonal intervention, and possible surgery down the road. In the meantime, many of us have learned to accept ambiguity, “holding all options open,” as some supportive therapists say. Many of us attempt to avoid labels for something that may or may not fade away in a year—or 10.
(more…)

Indiana Hospital Says No Transgender Patients Allowed

Filed under: Articles — Administrator @ 12:52 pm

by Jordan Rubenstein August 02, 2010 06:09 AM(pt)
gayrights.change.org/

Erin Vaught made a trip to the emergency room at Ball Memorial Hospital in Central Indiana on July 18th. She came in coughing up blood and was expecting treatment for a lung condition.

Instead of receiving appropriate medical treatment, Vaught was subject to ridiculing by hospital staff and was denied treatment, all because she’s transgender.

When Vaught signed in to the ER with her wife and son, she was entered into the hospital computer system as a male. When she pointed out that she has a female ID, people working at the hospital snickered at her instead of changing her gender in the computer system.
(more…)

Cops: Babysitter Struck, Killed Infant

Filed under: Articles — Administrator @ 12:47 pm

By STEPHANIE BARISH /wpix.com
5:23 PM EDT, August 2, 2010 /RIVERSIDE, N.Y. (WPIX)

A man is accused of fatally striking a 17-month-old infant he was babysitting Sunday night on the Shinnecock Indian Reservation on Long Island, according to New York State police.

The suspect has been identified as Pedro Jones, 20, of South Hampton. He has been charged with first-degree manslaughter after allegedly hitting the boy “several times throughout his body with close fists” and grabbed him by the neck, according to the felony complaint filed by police.

Authorities say Jones also told them, “I was trying to make him act like a boy instead of a little girl. I never struck that kid that hard before.”
(more…)

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