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00:00He's been in prison going on 19 years.
00:03Myself and his two children have suffered.
00:06The innocent must be let go.
00:09They must be free.
00:10Let go of the innocent!
00:11Let go of the innocent!
00:15Let go of the innocent!
00:16Let go of the innocent!
00:18Yes, let him go!
00:22We're marching for justice, for the wrongfully convicted.
00:26What do we want?
00:27Justice!
00:28Where do we want it?
00:30Now!
00:31It's the second day of the march for justice to Albany.
00:39From the Tabinsey Bridge all the way to Sing Sing.
00:43Free John Adrian Velazquez.
00:45Free John Adrian Velazquez.
00:46Here we are at Sing Sing Correctional Facility,
00:49sending positive vibes inside the prison for the safety
00:52of all the prisoners and for John Adrian Velazquez.
00:56Here we come!
00:58Albany!
00:59Here we come!
01:00Albany!
01:01Here we come!
01:02Albany!
01:03Here we come!
01:04Albany!
01:05I'll walk another 300 miles!
01:07Free the same must be!
01:10Free the same must be!
01:12We're going to be pushing for legislation on justice for the wrongfully incarcerated,
01:17and hold all those prosecutors accountable!
01:21Pretty innocent!
01:23Now!
01:23Pretty innocent!
01:25Now!
01:25Free John Adrian Velazquez!
01:27Now!
01:28Free John Adrian Velazquez!
01:30Now!
01:31Free John Adrian Velazquez!
01:33Now!
01:42Free John Adrian Velazquez!
02:19I support your son.
02:41He deserves to be home.
02:43Fingers crossed, okay?
02:45With everything that we've uncovered since this trial,
02:48we're looking to this appellate court to say,
02:52give him a chance.
02:54Let him call witnesses.
02:56Let a judge evaluate the credibility of the witnesses
02:59after seeing and hearing the witnesses.
03:01Let him take a fresh look at this case.
03:04Give him a hearing.
03:18My mother came to visit me.
03:34From the moment we embraced, I knew something was wrong.
03:38It held me in a dead silence.
03:40But eventually, through sob, she managed to say we lost.
03:44At that point, it still didn't register.
03:46I was like, all right.
03:47Lost who?
03:48Lost what?
03:50That the appeal.
03:52And it broke my heart to hear her say it,
03:54not necessarily because of what she said,
03:56but more so how she said it.
03:59As if it was over.
04:00As if the fight might end right there.
04:02I was losing faith.
04:07How many times are you going to get denied
04:09before you start to realize what you're really up against?
04:13JJ was out of options.
04:33His lawyers were telling me, game over.
04:35There's going to be nothing unless we find something new.
04:37I refused to accept that.
04:39I knew there were dozens of police reports
04:41that were withheld from him prior to his trial.
04:46But I had never been able to get my hands on them.
04:54It's March 21st, 2017.
04:57Fifteen years after I started this investigation.
05:01And I get home last night,
05:03and there's this big yellow envelope in my mailbox.
05:06No return address.
05:07And inside are all of the police reports.
05:11From JJ's case.
05:13Including all those police reports
05:15that were never turned over to him before trial.
05:18And I don't believe his defense ever saw either,
05:21because there's a couple in here
05:22that are particularly important.
05:25I see one that I think is a bombshell.
05:29It's a report called DT-593.
05:31That's what they call police reports
05:33in the police department.
05:35This is an interview with the co-defendant's father
05:37saying that the night before the murder,
05:41his son was with a friend who was light-skinned
05:44with braided hair,
05:46which was a description of the shooter.
05:51In that police report,
05:53it says that a detective spoke with Derry Daniels' father,
05:55and the father told this detective
05:58that the night before the crime,
06:01his son Derry came to his apartment
06:03with a friend who he owed money to.
06:06And the father described Derry's friend
06:09as a light-skinned black man with braids
06:13and said he could identify him.
06:16This was a lead that absolutely
06:18should have been followed up on,
06:20because the eyewitnesses described the shooter
06:22as a light-skinned black man,
06:24and some said he had braids.
06:27What did the cops do?
06:29Nothing.
06:30No one ever contacted the father again.
06:34No one ever turned over that report
06:36to the defense before trial.
06:40The defense had no opportunity
06:42to know that that really happened.
06:45I felt that he had a right
06:48to know about this information.
06:50I've seen some of the police reports
07:01that were missing.
07:03One was an interview
07:04with Derry Daniels' father.
07:08The father said,
07:0919 hours before the murder or so,
07:11that Derry had come over to his apartment
07:15with a friend
07:16that he owed money to,
07:18and the father described the friend
07:21as a light-skinned black man with braids
07:23and said he could identify him.
07:41Why am I finally in the shower 20 years later?
07:44There's no justice in its justice system.
07:58There's no justice in its justice system.
08:02From my understanding,
08:03your attorney is in touch with people,
08:05and this very well might be a key for you
08:09to open that door again.
08:11I lost 20 years of my life, man.
08:14What does it matter?
08:17I've got five years left for the sentence
08:19that they gave me.
08:21I'm so numb at this point that I can do it.
08:23And as we already discussed,
08:27this is not a normal habitat to live in.
08:29I spent half of my life in prison
08:31because people want to hold back information,
08:36because people want to continue
08:38to perpetuate lies.
08:41I didn't deserve this.
08:44My children didn't deserve this.
08:46My mother didn't deserve this.
08:56These people destroyed my life,
08:59destroyed my family,
09:01and this time we can't get back.
09:03Today, more than 17 years
09:27after John Adrian Velasquez
09:29was convicted of murder
09:31and sentenced to 25 years
09:34to life in prison,
09:37the truth has emerged.
09:40He had been victimized,
09:43victimized by a prosecutor
09:45who deliberately
09:47withheld significant information,
09:50and so we filed the motion
09:52to throw out Mr. Velasquez's conviction.
09:57We're demanding a new trial.
10:00Enough is enough.
10:01You cannot maintain the public's trust
10:05by keeping an innocent man in prison
10:08for a crime he did not commit.
10:10You want to maintain the public's trust?
10:12Then serve justice by liberating him
10:15and freeing the innocent man that he is.
10:18And that's why I'm here,
10:19because people did that for me.
10:20We will continue to tell the truth,
10:25and I will never, never stop the fight.
10:29I will keep coming back again and again and again
10:33until he's free.
10:35Enough is enough.
10:37Free the innocent.
10:38Free the innocent.
10:40Free the innocent.
10:41Free the innocent.
10:42Free the innocent.
10:43Free the innocent.
10:44Free the innocent.
10:44Free the innocent.
10:44Free the innocent.
10:45Free the innocent.
10:45Free the innocent.
10:46Free the innocent.
10:47Free the innocent.
10:47Free the innocent.
10:48Free the innocent.
10:49Free the innocent.
10:50Free the innocent.
10:51Free the innocent.
10:52Free the innocent.
10:53Free the innocent.
10:53Free the innocent.
10:54Free the innocent.
10:54Free the innocent.
10:55Free the innocent.
10:55Free the innocent.
11:26This group of seniors is such a lovable and special place.
11:31You all have created spectacular images.
11:34So I'm going to ask seniors, please rise and face your families and applaud them for loving and supporting you and giving you to the family.
11:49Jacob Velasquez!
11:56I missed both of my sons' graduations.
12:04The reality is I missed the majority of their lives.
12:10They were present for me, but I wasn't present for them.
12:15They kept me strong, and I wasn't able to do the same.
12:25J.J. would write to me, and he would talk about this generational cycle of incarceration and how they were the collateral damage.
12:39John Jr. and Jacob, you can't give them those years back.
12:45I knew that my son wasn't ready for the consequences of the choices he was making in his life.
12:55It just became a repetitive cycle where, you know, like, he was really starting to rebel against authority, and he was getting himself in more and more trouble.
13:07J.J.'s mother called me and said that J.J. Jr. was in trouble.
13:13The police were looking for him because he had violated his parole, because he got in some incident with a robbery, and Maria told me that he was hiding out in a motel room, and he didn't know what to do.
13:25J.J. Dan knew how much, you know, what my son was going through was hurting me, and so he went and checked on my son because I couldn't.
13:55You look so stressed, man.
14:02I'm not here to pass any judgment at all.
14:06Why are you here in this room?
14:10Just to get away from everything.
14:18I mean, I'm just thinking about a lot. It's like...
14:21I'm thinking about a lot. That's really what it is.
14:28Like, just a lot going through my mind.
14:37I'm really trying to figure out what I'm going to do.
14:40But until I figure that out, I know that I'm just going to stay here.
14:46They're saying you violated parole?
14:48Yeah, they're saying I violated it, so...
14:51Why? For what reason?
14:53I mean, I called police contact, which is already a violation.
14:58You're saying no matter what happens, the fact that you were arrested last week is a violation of parole?
15:04Yep.
15:06I have seven months of parole left, but I just came out of jail on Monday.
15:09Like, I just don't want to go right back right now. It's too much.
15:15What's your plan?
15:18I'm not too sure yet.
15:20That's another reason for being here, to make one.
15:24Well, have you thought it through?
15:27Not yet.
15:28Not yet.
15:29Well, let's do that, okay?
15:31Let's talk about every option you have.
15:34Your parole officer said you need to come in, right?
15:38Okay, we know that's a fact.
15:40So now, what are your options?
15:42Tell them to me.
15:44All of them. Just dream them up. What are all your options?
15:47Oh.
15:48Option one.
15:51To go there.
15:52Okay. Option two.
15:54To not go.
15:55Option three.
15:57There really is no option three. It's just two choices.
16:03You know, I was looking at some old tape recently.
16:09I don't know if you remember this, but did an interview with you in front of your old building.
16:19And you talked about how you never would like to go to jail to see your dad.
16:23And that you wanted to be an internal affairs officer.
16:26Because you wanted to fight for what was right and justice.
16:30And you never wanted to go to jail.
16:32You talked about that as a kid. Do you remember that?
16:34Yeah.
16:35So how does it feel to sit where you are today, having been through what you've been through?
16:43I don't know. That's hard.
16:47Everything just changed from that point until now.
16:50It's hard to even look back then.
16:54So much has happened.
17:00I'm sorry, man.
17:02I'm sorry.
17:03When's the last time you had somebody hug you?
17:16I don't know.
17:22You're gonna be okay. I care about you.
17:25You need to make smart choices.
17:28I'm not here to tell you what they are.
17:30You have a prepaid call from John Adrian.
17:34Hey. Hey.
17:36Uh, he's gonna have to make decisions, right?
17:39Yeah, definitely.
17:41I did my best to help him think through all of the options that he has before him.
17:47Well, I thank you to all.
17:49It's heavy stuff, man.
17:50Since he was 15, he's been going in and out of situations with the criminal justice system.
17:58And he's testimony to the fact that it's not working.
18:03Whatever they're doing with him while he's institutionalized, it's not working.
18:07It's obvious that he needs something else. He needs help.
18:12And he's not getting it in here.
18:15Let's hope that you can be out soon so you can, uh, get this, get all this back in order.
18:21I'm grateful.
18:22It's hard to speak about my son.
18:29He has become a statistic.
18:33Children that have parents in prison are more likely to come to prison.
18:39And that has become his reality.
18:41My son has got caught up in this repetitive cycle in the system.
18:47And while my son may not be doing the right thing out there,
18:52they should have never taken me from him.
18:56They should have given me an opportunity to be a father to him.
19:00We want our lives back.
19:02We want our lives back.
19:03We want our lives back.
19:29This is how JJ listens to music. Is your camera on?
19:32Is your camera on?
19:34The last time you saw a cassette tape.
19:36This is a cassette tape.
19:41Where'd you get this case from?
19:43Why don't you tell us about this?
19:45Come on, people.
19:46People know what a cassette tape is.
19:48Can I tell you something?
19:49Most people under the age of 40 have never seen that before,
19:54is my guess.
19:55That's 30.
19:56Under the age of 30?
19:56Yeah, yeah, say that, because I just came over the hill
20:00of 40.
20:00That's true, 30.
20:0130, yeah.
20:05Some habits are highly effective people.
20:08I listen to books on tape.
20:12Your audio good?
20:14All right, so where are we going?
20:15All right, so we're just going to frame this up first.
20:17How much did this police report and this motion that Bob
20:22filed in June breathe new life into your case?
20:26I feel hopeful.
20:28I have a court date coming up on December 7th.
20:31And, you know, I'm hoping to be heard.
20:35What are your expectations going into that in a few weeks?
20:40Listen, if I'm the narrator of this story,
20:42I walk out that courtroom in a few weeks.
20:46But I'm not.
20:47The judge will have a final decision to make, and he
20:51will determine whether I receive justice or not.
20:58JJ's attorneys argued that there was a lot of information that
21:01wasn't handed over, that wasn't known at trial.
21:06The judge grants the motion.
21:07There will be a hearing.
21:09For the first time since 2000, JJ was going to be in a courtroom
21:14again.
21:17In a quarter mile, turn slide left onto I-87 South.
21:25Jacob and I are on our way to Robert Gottlieb's law office
21:30to bring court clothes for John Adrian so he'll look like the man
21:37that he really is when he faces the judge in court.
21:42I almost don't break down when I see him in court.
21:48He said that he wants his belt to match his shoes.
21:51He doesn't care if that's not the fashion or not.
21:55He took one of his friends to the prom.
21:57He had on a pair of those caramel-colored shoes.
22:01And I think he had a plaid shirt.
22:04And I said, who dressed you?
22:08He makes his own fashion.
22:09I picked this up.
22:19What?
22:20Wrong.
22:21You have arrived at your destination.
22:39What is unbelievable about today is that after 18 years,
22:52Mr. Velasquez is going to be present in court.
23:01This man has a chance to listen, not only to arguments,
23:05but to have a glimmer of hope that maybe the judge
23:09is not just going through the motions.
23:15It is a unique day in the history of this battle.
23:31We are ready.
23:33We've been ready from the first goddamn day.
23:35Good afternoon, everyone.
23:38My understanding is that the issue is the significance
23:42of a police report that everyone agrees was not turned over
23:47to the defense before trial.
23:50The police report indicated that the father of the co-defendant
23:57saw the co-defendant the night before the incident
24:01in the company of another person, and the issues are whether or not
24:08that information was potentially exculpatory and material.
24:14Mr. Gottlieb, you'll go first.
24:16Your Honor, thank you very much.
24:17I appreciate that.
24:18Your Honor, knowing what this case is all about, knowing that the entire case
24:22was based on unreliable eyewitness identification, it is reasonably possible
24:28that if that DD5 had been turned over to the defense, its information presented
24:32to the jury would have, at minimum, had had a reasonable possibility to change
24:37their verdict from guilty to not guilty, and would have saved Mr. Velasquez
24:4118 years of his life served behind bars.
24:46It deprived the defense of the opportunity to show that the people rushed to judgment,
24:51and that the police arrested Mr. Velasquez without thoroughly investigating solid leads,
24:56that the police dropped the ball and failed to pursue Danny Daniels as a witness as well
25:01as others.
25:03This information and the people's withholding of it, Your Honor, strikes at the heart of
25:07the entire process, at the integrity of the trial and the verdict, a process that resulted
25:12in Mr. Velasquez's wrongful conviction and unjust imprisonment.
25:16Mr. Velasquez's conviction must be vacated.
25:20All right.
25:22Thank you, Your Honor.
25:23Go ahead.
25:24We, too, are interested in justice.
25:27We're interested to see that the right person is convicted, and we're interested to see that
25:31the person who shot Al Ward at point-blank range in the head is where he should be.
25:38So the question really boils down to whether or not that DD5 is favorable.
25:44If it turns out that this is referring to another person, then so what?
25:50So what that 19 hours before the co-defendant was in the company of someone else at his father's
25:56apartment, and this generic description of male, black, and braided hair applies to a universe
26:03of potential individuals that to assume that that person who was with him 19 hours before
26:09was a robber is just rank speculation.
26:13We respectfully ask the court to deny the defendant's motion to set aside the verdict.
26:19All right.
26:21We will make a decision and advance the matter and notify you of the decision.
26:25So thank you very much to everyone for your hard work and dedication to this matter.
27:13A few months later, the judge said that the Brady issue was moot and had no significance and would not disturb a jury verdict.
27:25I'm not scheduled to appear in front of a parole board for another five years, at the very least.
27:37Now I'm going to have to face a parole board that's not going to be open to the fact that I am not going to admit to a crime that I did not commit.
27:46After J.J. is denied in 2018, every day I'm trying to figure out what to do.
28:10Who to call, how to push this forward.
28:14I wanted to keep his spirits up.
28:16We're speaking on the phone five times a week.
28:19I'm visiting him on a weekly basis.
28:22And all of a sudden, COVID hits.
28:26On edge, coronavirus cases skyrocket from coast to coast, with numbers in the U.S. expected to spike this week.
28:36I couldn't visit anymore.
28:38Programs were closed.
28:40But J.J. still can make phone calls.
28:41New York remains the biggest coronavirus hotspot, accounting for more than half of the country's cases and nearly a third of the deaths.
28:52Hey, man, how are you?
28:53I've never seen anything like this in my life.
28:56Right now, every time somebody gets off the phone, they're talking about somebody else that they know that's sick.
29:02That person dies, and then you have whatever last memories you have.
29:06You can feel the fear in the air.
29:11It's important to be able to contain that fear and that tension because prison is a place where a lot of things can happen from confusion, which ends up turning into chaos.
29:23Let's talk about you for a second.
29:24Describe your personal living situation.
29:27I wash my hands six to eight times an hour.
29:31Every time I touch something, I feel like I have to wash my hands.
29:34I wouldn't say I'm a hypochondriac, but, like, I'm going crazy in here.
29:40And it's the people that...
29:41You have one minute left.
29:42...in society that keep me grounded.
29:46They're like, listen, you know, this is going to pass.
29:48You're going to be all right.
29:50And, you know, I'm fortunate in that sense.
29:54In the middle of COVID, more people start getting involved, and J.J. supporters made a big push for the governor of New York to grant him clemency.
30:07Now, that doesn't mean that he would be exonerated, but it would mean that he would be eligible for an early release.
30:22But that was still a long shot.
30:25The governor gets thousands of applications every year, and only a few dozen are granted.
30:30Every year, I was getting information that I was a primary candidate, that there was, you know, top-level people pushing for me.
30:42And every year, names would get mentioned, people would get released, and it wasn't me.
30:50On August 17th, 2021, my phone rings, and it's Superintendent Capra.
31:04You good?
31:04Yeah.
31:05All right, thank you.
31:06You all right?
31:07What are you going to do, record this all the way up?
31:13I'm going to...
31:13Why not, man?
31:15This is history.
31:16We're going...
31:17Wait a minute.
31:17Listen, we'll do it right here.
31:18We just were notified minutes ago, half an hour ago, after so many years, we're going to tell J.J. Velasquez that he got executive clemency.
31:27I have to say, in my 40 years of service, this is one of the more exciting times in my whole entire career.
31:32Why is it so...
31:33Because I know he doesn't belong here.
31:35Because I know he doesn't belong here, and he's going to do fantastic things.
31:38How does it feel to be the one that's...
31:39I'm overwhelmed.
31:40I really am...
31:42Right?
31:42See, she said, I have goosebumps.
31:44I said, you don't even know.
31:45I've been working with him for nine years.
31:47How about 19 for me?
31:49And 19 for you.
31:50So this is going to be incredible.
31:53I'm going to tell him that he's being transferred to, and I'm going to give his mother's action.
32:02Hey, how are you?
32:03Right.
32:03Let's go.
32:05What's going on?
32:06How's it going?
32:07You all right?
32:07You're being transferred.
32:24Yeah.
32:25You don't know?
32:25No.
32:27You know we're Habistro, New York?
32:29Absolutely.
32:29That's where you're going, bro.
32:30Thank you, man.
32:32That's where you're going.
32:33September 9th, you're out.
32:42I'm really proud of you, buddy.
32:44God bless you.
32:45You deserve it.
32:46You deserve it.
32:57You deserve it.
33:11There he is.
33:12There he is.
33:14There he is.
33:16Come on, there you go.
33:17All right, bro.
33:20My brother?
33:21Hey, Ty, come on.
33:23Come on.
33:26Come on.
33:28Jacob.
33:29Jacob, what's up?
33:33I got a surprise for you.
33:35That's a surprise.
33:36You know, for 23 years I've been telling you that I'm going to come home one day, right?
33:42Well, now I can officially tell you.
33:44Cuomo granted me clemency and I'm coming home next month.
33:52You all right?
33:56It's real this time, champ.
33:59One breath at a time.
34:01We're almost there.
34:02You're coming home within a month.
34:06September 9th might be the date.
34:10Yeah, that means you guys got to start cleaning my room.
34:19Call JJ real quick.
34:23Yo, what's up, man?
34:27What's going on?
34:28Your father's coming home within a month.
34:29That's what's going on.
34:30I just got clemency.
34:33That is the best birthday gift in the world, huh?
34:35Your birthday's tomorrow.
34:36Happy birthday, my son.
34:39We're about to make everything right in this family.
34:42You guys just stay focused.
34:44You guys check on Grandma tonight because she's going to be emotional, okay?
34:51I love you too.
34:51I'm actually going to hear him say good morning and hear his footsteps in the house and his voice.
35:15This is the bed that he slept in as a youth, and I've never had the heart to throw it away.
35:30So once he's home, it's going in the garbage, and he'll be picking his own bed and mattress.
35:39So it will be his room once again.
35:42A lot of emotions, a lot of up and down.
35:56Sometimes I can't sleep at night.
35:58I've officially moved out here to be with my father, and now I get to build a better bone with my father as a free man.
36:15We have a lot to accomplish out here.
36:19It's going to be a hell of a road.
36:21I'm looking forward to it.
36:22It's a big day for us.
36:44It's a day that we've longed for, for a very long time.
36:52Governor Cuomo granted his clemency, and, and, and we'll continue, you know, to fight, to get him exonerated on the outside.
37:06Oh, man.
37:08It's a, it's a big day.
37:10That's all I can say.
37:11When we met Dan, it was like hope that we were going to go somewhere, that things were going to happen.
37:21All doors started opening.
37:2420 years.
37:2520 years.
37:26This has been 20 years.
37:28This has been 20 years.
37:29But it's a good day.
37:30I'm taking you home.
37:59I'm taking you home, man.
38:07What?
38:14Finally yucky.
38:16Has it even hit you yet?
38:18It hit me, but it doesn't hit me the way people expect it to be.
38:21I've always been expecting this.
38:23I haven't been exonerated yet.
38:25I still have a fight ahead of me.
38:27But the one thing that just trumps everything is that today,
38:31I'm going to be with my children and my mother and you.
38:37Let's go home.
38:38Let's go home.
38:39All right.
38:40This is the last time you're leaving the cell.
38:41Mmm.
38:47This is it, my brother.
38:48Mmm.
38:50I love you too, man.
38:51Stay focused.
38:52You ain't gonna forget about it.
38:53You did it.
38:54Oh, man.
38:55What's up?
38:56Check it out.
38:57Check it out, man.
38:58Flash.
38:59The only way that I could accept this experience and give some type of sense to it is to say that I've found purpose and strength to continue to survive and to continue to strive to be better by helping others.
39:24I have to go and report to a parole officer at 9 o'clock in the morning tomorrow, and she's going to give me stipulations, right?
39:38I'm going to have a curfew at 9 o'clock at night.
39:40I'm a grown man.
39:41I haven't been in society for 24 years, and I have to go to my house and be in my house every day by 9 o'clock.
39:47I have to ask permission to leave New York State.
39:51This is your old stuff you can take home with you.
39:54I have to go to programs that are not suited for me.
39:57Put real clothes on now.
39:59You want me to go to a violence program?
40:01They want me to go to a substance abuse program.
40:03This is what I have to live.
40:05I have to continue living a lot.
40:08Mm.
40:09Mm-mm.
40:10Okay.
40:11He's fitting.
40:12Oh.
40:13What?
40:14Oh.
40:15That's what a free man looks like.
40:26Here's your clemency.
40:28Time by Cuomo and his secretary.
40:37Congratulations, sir.
40:38Let's get ready to go.
40:39Your family's waiting outside.
40:40All right.
40:41The objective has always been to go on that side.
41:06It's really over.
41:11Coming in.
41:12This is it.
41:13Come in here.
41:14Come in here.
41:15Come in here.
41:16Come in here.
41:38This is it.
41:39Come in here.
41:40He's coming.
41:43Yes.
41:45No you.
41:46No.
41:47Come on.
41:50Come on.
41:51No.
41:53Oh, my god.
41:54Oahll.
41:56Oh, my god.
42:00No.
42:01Oh, my God.
42:31Oh, my God.
43:01I've seen the swollen sea rolling through the dark.
43:16Cold wind blowing through our trees, steal away the spark.
43:27Searching for forever.
43:30Forever I'll be gone the whole night through.
43:37But in the morning light, I will be with you.
43:43I've seen a thousand stars.
43:58They shine until they fade.
44:03Burned into my memory.
44:08A long and lost parade.
44:13I love you, man.
44:14I love you too.
44:15Yes, you do.
44:16You're great.
44:17You're in trouble.
44:18You're doing like your shoes.
44:19Thank you, man.
44:20I love you too.
44:24I love you too.
44:27Do it like his shoes.
44:30Thank you, sir.
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