- 7 weeks ago
From serial killers who treated murder like a game to dictators who orchestrated genocide, these individuals left a trail of unimaginable horror. Join us as we count down our picks for the most terrifying people throughout history! Our countdown includes figures who transformed cruelty into an art form and left psychological scars on entire nations. Which historical monster keeps you up at night?
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00:00His killings were so sadistic and brutal that even experienced detectives were shocked.
00:05Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we're counting down our picks for the 20 most terrifying people throughout history.
00:12The eyes, lupine eyes, eyes that were able to bore into the center of your soul.
00:18Number 20, The Zodiac Killer.
00:20I shall no longer announce to anyone when I commit my murders, they shall look like routine robberies, killings of anger, and a few fake accidents, etc.
00:29The police shall never catch me because I have been too clever for them.
00:33Kicking off our list is the phantom who taunted the San Francisco Bay Area in the late 1960s.
00:39While his confirmed body count is lower than others on this list, the Zodiac is terrifying because he treated murder like a game.
00:46And he knew that he was winning.
00:49He sent complex cryptograms to newspapers, threatened to shoot children on school buses,
00:54and famously wore a hooded executioner's costume during one of his attacks at Lake Berryessa.
01:00But perhaps scariest of all, the Zodiac technically won his depraved game.
01:05He was never caught, and his identity remains an unresolved question mark in the annals of American true crime.
01:12The Zodiac essentially proved that you could taunt the police, terrorize a populace, kill people, and completely get away with it.
01:19I can't prove this.
01:21Just because you can't prove it doesn't mean it's not true.
01:25Easy, dirty, hairy.
01:29Finish the book.
01:31Number 19. Gilles Deray.
01:33Gilles Deray, Marshal of France.
01:37Formidable to men, fascinating to women, feared by all.
01:42Few figures have plummeted from such heights to such depraved depths.
01:46In the 15th century, Gilles Deray fought valiantly alongside Joan of Arc and became a national hero.
01:52But behind his castle walls, he was a monster.
01:56Deray is believed to have kidnapped, sexually assaulted, and murdered hundreds of children to satisfy his twisted occult obsessions.
02:03The contrast between his public image as a holy warrior of France and his private reality as a prolific child murderer is deeply disturbing.
02:12He serves as a grim historical reminder that monsters often hide in plain sight, and sometimes they wear the armor of a savior.
02:20He is also often cited as the true inspiration for the blue-beard fairy tale, proving that history is often far scarier than fiction.
02:28You would be perfect to sit on my throne.
02:32So perfect that you might like it too much, and therefore disturb my fragile peace of mind.
02:40Number 18. Ivan the Terrible.
02:42Ivan was by far the most bloodthirsty ruler that country has had to endure.
02:49Also known as Ivan the Terrible, he tears his enemies limb from limb and feeds them to the dogs.
02:55Earning the moniker the Terrible requires more than just a bad temper.
03:00The first czar of Russia was a man consumed by extreme paranoia and uncontrollable rage, seeing enemies in every shadow.
03:08He famously beat his pregnant daughter-in-law and caused her to miscarry, and then bludgeoned his own son and heir to death with a staff.
03:15And beyond his grotesque domestic violence, he also created the Apregnina, a terrifying secret police force that rode with the symbol of a dog's head on their saddles to sniff out treason.
03:27But they wouldn't just find dissenters.
03:29They would boil, roast, and massacre anyone Ivan suspected of disloyalty.
03:35His reign established a bloody legacy of state terror, proving that the most dangerous person in the country could be the very man sworn to protect it.
03:43After six weeks of siege, the Nogaret was really burned down.
03:50Ten thousand would die.
03:53It takes hundreds of years after he had ordered the death of so many that he acquires the title Ivan the Terrible.
04:00Number 17. Jack the Ripper.
04:03The violent story of the Ripper is so shrouded in myth that outlandish theories still surface, making it hard to separate facts and fiction.
04:11He is the phantom that gave birth to the modern age of fear, and the modern conception of the serial killer.
04:18Terrorizing London's Whitechapel district in 1888, Jack the Ripper didn't just kill.
04:24He viciously mutilated his victims in the open streets.
04:28The resulting scenes were of absolute horror and shocking gore.
04:31The sheer audacity of the crimes, combined with the bloody, from hell letter sent to George Lusk, sparked a media panic that defined the era.
04:41And like the Zodiac after him, Jack's identity remains a complete mystery, as he was never caught.
04:47He was and remains the ultimate boogeyman of the Victorian age.
04:51A man prowling the dark and seedy streets, and butchering the women who caught his psychotic eye.
04:57Please forgive me for the implication that I'm praising it, but it was Jack's masterpiece.
05:03Having done what he did in that room, I think that he could certainly take a break.
05:09Number 16. Idi Amin.
05:11The former military ruler, President Idi Amin, said Uganda's Asians, brought to the country by the British,
05:17were depriving black Africans of opportunities,
05:20and gave Asians who held British passports 90 days to leave the country or face being put in concentration camps.
05:27Known as the Butcher of Uganda, Idi Amin was a dictator who presented a terrifying paradox of joviality and genocide.
05:36Standing a physically imposing 6'4", Amin expelled 80,000 Asians from his country
05:42and presided over the slaughter of up to 500,000 Ugandans.
05:46His erratic behavior fueled terrifying rumors that he practiced cannibalism
05:50and kept the severed heads of enemies to have conversations with them.
05:55Of course, the veracity of this has been disputed.
05:58Amin showed the world that a leader could be dismissed as a buffoon internationally
06:02while still running a slaughterhouse at home.
06:05His regime was a chaotic blend of absurdity and atrocity.
06:08That unpredictable and charismatic power is often the most dangerous kind of all.
06:13Because I had to flee the country in the darkness of the night with my wife and children
06:19because my life was threatened, I came to know that I was on his hit list
06:24and I would have been bumped off had I stayed much longer in the country.
06:30Number 15, Richard Ramirez.
06:33Why did you kill those people?
06:36No comments, no comments.
06:38I cannot answer that at this time.
06:42While some killers hide in the shadows, the Night Stalker revealed his own demonic image.
06:47Terrorizing Los Angeles in the mid-1980s, Ramirez had no specific pattern.
06:53He attacked men, women, and children alike,
06:55breaking into any random house that caught his eye that night.
06:59With his rotting teeth, weird satanic ramblings, and lack of hygiene,
07:04he was a bizarre movie slasher come to life.
07:06In court, Ramirez famously drew a pentagram on his hand,
07:10flashed it to the cameras, and yelled,
07:12Hail Satan!
07:13Further adding to the legend of his barbarism.
07:16Because his crimes were entirely opportunistic,
07:19he made an entire city afraid to sleep.
07:22In the end, Ramirez murdered at least 15 people,
07:26embodying the primal fear that we all share,
07:28that of the intruder in the night.
07:30Richard Ramirez's whole trip was to hide in a tree,
07:33or hide behind a fence and watch these victims at nighttime,
07:37and wait into the wee hours of the night.
07:39And then, while they slept, creep in, you know, like a coward, and kill them.
07:44Number 14, Vlad the Impaler.
07:46The story goes that Romania's bottomless well of tyranny,
07:50catastrophe, and overall human misery
07:52can all be traced back to one terrifying ruler,
07:55and his supernatural evil.
07:57Long before he inspired the legend of Dracula,
08:00Vlad III was crafting a legacy of very real horror.
08:04This 15th century prince defended Wallachia
08:07by turning his enemies into a literal forest of rotting corpses.
08:11No, seriously, he made a forest of rotting corpses.
08:14As per his name, Vlad's trademark was impalement,
08:18driving a greased stake through the body,
08:20and avoiding vital organs,
08:22ensuring that the victim remained alive and suffering for days.
08:25He once displayed 20,000 impaled bodies
08:28to scare off an invading Ottoman army.
08:31It worked perfectly.
08:32The sultan witnessed the surreal carnage
08:34and retreated in sheer horror.
08:36Vlad demonstrated that cruelty
08:38could in fact be used as a strategic military asset,
08:41and his methods were so gruesome
08:43that he remained synonymous with bloodlust
08:45centuries after his death.
08:47So one of his tactics was to capture prisoners
08:51and then impale them.
08:53It's a wooden stick that goes into the rectum.
08:56Gross.
08:57Number 13. Ed Kemper.
08:59Now, would you get in the car with this man?
09:02Huh?
09:07Hmm?
09:09The state has made me much more credible as a human being.
09:13This killer is basically Satan come to earth.
09:16He stands a gigantic six foot nine,
09:19making him incredibly imposing.
09:21He also has a genius IQ,
09:23because of course he does.
09:25And not only that,
09:26but he was also known for being polite and articulate,
09:29and even befriended the police officers
09:31who were actively hunting him.
09:33But behind that friendly mask was a monster.
09:35Kemper became known as the co-ed killer
09:38after butchering a number of college students
09:40and engaging in horrific acts with their bodies.
09:43The horror culminated when he murdered his own mother,
09:46decapitated her,
09:47and then used her head as a dartboard.
09:49He then turned himself into the police,
09:51claiming, essentially,
09:53that he was tired of killing.
09:55You wouldn't know it with that friendly facade,
09:57but Kemper is evil incarnate.
09:59She said for seven years,
10:02she said,
10:02I haven't had sex with a man
10:04because of you, my murderous son.
10:06So I got a claw hammer,
10:14and I beat her to death.
10:16Then I cut her head off.
10:19Number 12, Attila the Hun.
10:21Attila the Hun stands as one of the most ruthless,
10:24if not the most ruthless,
10:27military leaders of all time.
10:29To the Romans,
10:30Attila the Hun was a form of divine punishment.
10:33Throughout the 5th century,
10:34Attila didn't just conquer cities,
10:37he erased them from the map entirely,
10:39raising buildings and slaughtering the inhabitants.
10:42And he commanded his forces
10:43with such an intensity and ferocity
10:45that people,
10:46especially his victims,
10:47believed that the apocalypse had arrived.
10:50Roman accounts depicted the Huns as savages
10:52who ate raw meat
10:53that was warmed under their saddles.
10:56And it was said that Attila never laughed.
10:58And while he likely never said it himself,
11:01later legends attribute a famous quote to him
11:03that basically sums up the terror.
11:06It says, quote,
11:07where my horse treads,
11:09the grass never grows again.
11:11Attila's greatest weapon are his people
11:14and the way they fight
11:16and their novelty
11:18and the terror they instill.
11:22Number 11, Jeffrey Dahmer.
11:24Tired of everyone leaving me.
11:26Many people are called the neighbor from hell,
11:34but Jeffrey Dahmer might just be the ultimate example.
11:37Dahmer murdered 17 people
11:38and even tried turning some into submissive zombies
11:41by drilling holes in their skulls
11:43and injecting acid into their brains.
11:45When police finally raided his apartment in 1991,
11:49they found severed heads in the fridge
11:51and a human torso dissolved in a vat of acid.
11:54The story is revolting in every measurable way,
11:57but it's the methodical and lonely nature
11:59of his depravity that makes Dahmer
12:01such a legendary villain.
12:03Unlike many serial killers,
12:05he wasn't a raving lunatic
12:06or a charismatic con man.
12:08He was a solitary and awkward man
12:10committing unspeakable acts
12:12in a boring apartment building.
12:14Sometimes evil really does live right next door.
12:17Jeff.
12:18Oh, hey.
12:27I gotta say,
12:28that smell is worse than ever.
12:31Number 10, Rasputin.
12:33Rasputin was able to do something
12:35which physically altered people.
12:39Rah-rah Rasputin hovers in history
12:41as a figure of almost supernatural dread.
12:44While not a mass murderer,
12:46the mad monk was a dirty
12:47and unkempt mystic
12:48with hypnotic eyes
12:50who manipulated the Russian royal family
12:52and helped bring down an empire.
12:54You could see how his legend
12:55has devolved into such outlandish myth.
12:58He is perhaps most famous
12:59for his legendary refusal to die,
13:02poisoned,
13:03shot multiple times,
13:04beaten,
13:05and thrown into a frozen river.
13:07Of course,
13:07this prolonged death
13:08has been largely fabricated
13:10throughout the years,
13:11but it still speaks
13:12to the mythic power
13:13that he held over his victims
13:14and the country.
13:16He represents the terrifying idea
13:17of a dark sorcerer
13:19pulling the strings of a nation,
13:20and this reputation
13:21hasn't let up
13:22for a hundred years.
13:24They prefer to create legend
13:26about devil.
13:27They gave him cakes,
13:29they continue to be still alive,
13:32they shot him,
13:33they continue to be still alive,
13:35and devil returned
13:37and tried to kill one of them,
13:39but they shot him.
13:41Five men shot the only,
13:43not мужik,
13:44not peasant,
13:45but devil.
13:46Number nine,
13:47Albert Fish.
13:48I don't think any of the boys
13:50and girls at the party
13:51will look half as nice as you.
13:53Saying that's not a bad idea.
13:56Maybe grace should accompany me.
13:58The gray man,
13:59even his nickname
14:00is creepy and gross.
14:02Albert Fish looked like
14:03everyone's kindly grandfather,
14:05which of course made him
14:06invisible to his victims.
14:07In reality,
14:08Fish was a sadomasochist
14:10and a cannibal
14:10who targeted children
14:12during the Great Depression.
14:13He is perhaps most famous
14:14for writing a polite
14:15handwritten letter
14:16to the mother
14:17of one of his victims,
14:18describing in grotesque detail
14:20how he killed,
14:21prepared,
14:22and ultimately ate her child.
14:24That level of inhuman cruelty
14:26is almost impossible
14:27to comprehend.
14:28Fish didn't kill
14:29for money or anger,
14:30he killed for the sheer
14:32twisted pleasure of pain,
14:33for the fun of it all.
14:35He represents
14:35the ultimate betrayal of trust,
14:37proving that the most
14:38innocent-looking amongst us
14:40can harbor the most
14:41depraved secrets imaginable.
14:43On Sunday,
14:44June the 3rd, 1928,
14:47we had lunch.
14:48What's the matter with you?
14:49Grace sat in my lap
14:51and kissed me.
14:54Didn't get a job
14:55I applied for.
14:56I made up my mind
14:57to eat her.
14:58Number 8.
14:59Talat Pasha.
15:00You know what they say,
15:12the pen is mightier
15:13than the sword.
15:14History sometimes
15:15proves it to be true.
15:17As the Grand Vizier
15:18of the Ottoman Empire,
15:19Talat Pasha
15:20was the architect
15:21of the Armenian Genocide.
15:23He organized
15:24the deportation
15:25and murder
15:25of over 1 million people
15:27using the telegraph system,
15:28treating human extermination
15:30like a simple
15:31administrative task.
15:32He showed the world
15:33that you can commit
15:34monstrous acts
15:35from behind a desk
15:36without ever
15:37getting your hands bloody.
15:38And it's this ability
15:39to physically
15:40and emotionally
15:41detach himself
15:42from the suffering
15:42of millions
15:43makes him one of the most
15:44chilling figures
15:45in human history.
15:47Operating in the 1910s,
15:49Talat Pasha
15:49set the precedent
15:50for the modern
15:51state-sponsored genocides
15:53that would go on
15:54to plague
15:54much of the 20th century.
16:09Number 7,
16:10Charles Manson.
16:11All right,
16:11on your feet.
16:12Let's go.
16:12On your feet.
16:13Let's go.
16:14On your feet.
16:14What's the matter?
16:15You're under arrest,
16:16Charlie.
16:17Grand Theft Auto.
16:18Okay?
16:18Let's go.
16:19Let's go.
16:19Hey, why don't you tell me
16:20just relax?
16:21Let's go.
16:21And I'll tell some of the girls
16:23to be nice to you.
16:24He is the monster
16:26that ended the summer of love.
16:28It's almost biblical.
16:29Charles Manson
16:30wasn't a serial killer
16:31in the traditional sense,
16:33but his crimes
16:33were no less terrifying for it.
16:35As the charismatic leader
16:36of the Manson family,
16:38Charles brainwashed
16:39young and impressionable hippies
16:41into believing
16:41his own warped worldviews
16:43and culty,
16:44pseudo-religious babble.
16:46His influence culminated
16:47in 1969,
16:49when he ordered
16:49his followers
16:50to brutally butcher
16:51seven people,
16:52including pregnant actress
16:54Sharon Tate.
16:55Manson is a jarring figure
16:56in virtually every sense.
16:58He was powerful,
16:59he looked creepy,
17:01and he harbored thoughts
17:02of deplorable violence
17:03that, even to this day,
17:04seem unspeakable.
17:06With the carved forehead
17:07and empty hypnotic stare,
17:09Charles Manson remains
17:11the ultimate symbol
17:12of counterculture
17:13gone horribly, horribly wrong.
17:15If you don't stop,
17:17I'll have to have you removed.
17:18If you don't stop,
17:20I'll have you removed.
17:21I've got a little system.
17:24Call the next witness.
17:25Do you think I'm king?
17:28Number six,
17:31Timur, or Temerlane.
17:34While many conquered for land,
17:36this 14th century warlord
17:37seemed to conquer
17:38for the sheer artistry
17:39of death and destruction.
17:41Seeking to rebuild
17:42the Mongol Empire,
17:43Timur left a gruesome
17:45signature in his wake,
17:46nightmarish towers of skulls.
17:49After destroying a city,
17:50Timur would order his troops
17:52to cement thousands
17:53of severed heads
17:54into pyramids,
17:55to serve as a warning
17:56to his enemies.
17:57In Isfahan alone,
17:59he massacred 70,000 people
18:01just to make a point.
18:02He combined military genius
18:04with a theatrical love
18:05for violence,
18:06that few in history
18:07have ever matched.
18:08Timur's campaigns
18:09turned entire regions
18:10into graveyards,
18:11and he didn't just
18:12want to win.
18:13He wanted to scare
18:14and traumatize
18:15the whole world
18:16into submission.
18:17A tower of severed heads
18:18is certainly a good way
18:19to do that.
18:21Number five,
18:22Leopold II.
18:23To the world,
18:24Leopold II was a refined monarch.
18:27To the Congo,
18:28he was the devil himself.
18:29Leopold ran the Congo Free State
18:31not as a colony,
18:32but as its own
18:33personal possession,
18:34enslaving the population
18:36in order to harvest rubber.
18:37Roughly 10 million people
18:39died under his brutal regime,
18:40all so he could funnel profits
18:42back to Europe
18:43to build palaces.
18:45And to prove that
18:45they weren't wasting bullets
18:47hunting for food,
18:48Leopold's soldiers
18:49were required to present
18:50the severed hands
18:51of their victims.
18:53Of course,
18:53this often led to
18:54the mutilation of the living
18:55just so the soldiers
18:56could meet their ridiculous quotas.
18:59Leopold's story
19:00is a chilling example
19:01of greed overriding humanity.
19:03He never set foot
19:04in the Congo,
19:05yet he caused more suffering
19:06than almost anyone in history.
19:08Before the clashes,
19:10peaceful protesters
19:11climbed the statue
19:12to Belgium's colonial king,
19:14Leopold II,
19:15waving the flag
19:16of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
19:18Number four,
19:19Genghis Khan.
19:20Priests prophesied
19:22a coming apocalypse
19:23as Mongolian hordes
19:24approached the borders
19:25of the Holy Roman Empire.
19:29The whole continent
19:30watched and waited
19:31in terror.
19:33The scope of the Mongol Empire
19:35is hard to comprehend,
19:36but the body count
19:37they left behind
19:38is even harder.
19:39Genghis Khan created
19:40the largest contiguous empire
19:42in history,
19:43but the cost
19:44was roughly 40 million lives.
19:46His policy was simple,
19:47submit or die.
19:49If a city resisted,
19:51Genghis Khan would simply
19:52plow through it,
19:53often exterminating
19:54every living thing
19:55within its walls,
19:56men, women,
19:57children,
19:58even animals.
19:59Believe it or not,
20:00his wars were so deadly
20:01that the global population
20:02dropped to such
20:03a significant degree
20:04that it allowed forests
20:06to regrow
20:07on the empty farmland.
20:09While undeniably
20:10a brilliant strategist,
20:11the Khan's evil
20:12lies in the total
20:13annihilation
20:14of the opposition.
20:15There were no rules,
20:17no conventions,
20:18no nobility.
20:19You submitted
20:20or you died.
20:21Drawing from
20:22the Book of Revelations,
20:23they saw the invaders
20:25as the armies
20:26of Satan.
20:29Their fears
20:30would soon be realized.
20:32Number three,
20:33whole pot.
20:33So this woman here,
20:35for example,
20:35she's, what,
20:3770 years old?
20:38I mean,
20:39how can there be a spy?
20:41Yeah.
20:42What kind of spy
20:43could be
20:44this old lady?
20:46In a fanatical bid
20:47to reset time
20:48to the so-called
20:49year zero,
20:51whole pot
20:51turned Cambodia
20:52into a slaughterhouse.
20:53The result
20:54was the killing fields,
20:56where nearly a quarter
20:57of the country's population
20:58was wiped out
20:59in the span
20:59of just four years.
21:01The scope
21:01is simply impossible
21:03to comprehend.
21:04But the truly scary part
21:05was the flippant
21:06criteria for death.
21:08If you wore glasses,
21:09spoke a foreign language,
21:11or even if you had
21:11soft hands,
21:13you were considered
21:13an enemy of the state
21:14and executed.
21:16He turned children
21:16against their parents
21:17and destroyed
21:18the social fabric
21:19of an entire nation.
21:21His regime
21:21proves that ideology,
21:23when taken
21:24to its absolute extreme,
21:26can justify
21:26the murder of millions
21:27for reasons
21:28that seem
21:29completely insane
21:30to the outside world.
21:32The wind
21:32whispers
21:33of fear
21:34and hate.
21:36The war
21:37has killed
21:37love,
21:38Sydney,
21:39and those
21:40who confess
21:41to the anger
21:42vanish,
21:44and no one
21:44they ask
21:45where they go.
21:47Number two,
21:48Joseph Stalin.
21:49Stalin had built
21:51an empire
21:51on a framework
21:52of terror,
21:54justifying it
21:54in the name
21:55of a political faith,
21:56and through it
21:57he ruled
21:58his country,
21:59his government,
22:00his party,
22:01and his family.
22:03The Soviet Union
22:03has seen its share
22:04of villains,
22:05but none quite like
22:06Joseph Stalin.
22:07Through the inhumane
22:08gulag system,
22:10man-made famines
22:11like the Haladamor
22:12and the Great Purge,
22:14Stalin was personally
22:14responsible for the
22:15deaths of millions.
22:17The body count
22:18was ridiculous,
22:19but it was the
22:19psychological terror
22:20that truly set him
22:21apart.
22:22He often purged
22:23his own inner circle,
22:24erased people
22:25from the history books,
22:26and created
22:27a paranoid society
22:28where children
22:29openly denounced
22:30their parents.
22:31It was said
22:32that you could
22:32even be murdered
22:33for being the
22:34first person
22:34to stop clapping
22:35after a speech.
22:37For 30 years,
22:38not a single person
22:39in the Soviet Union
22:40felt safe,
22:41making him
22:41one of the most
22:42terrifying,
22:43effective tyrants
22:44to ever live.
22:45It was a terrible time.
22:47Everyone wanted
22:47to destroy everyone else.
22:49There were betrayals,
22:51denunciations,
22:52and such hatred
22:53that crossed
22:54all normal boundaries.
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23:07and switch on
23:08your notifications.
23:11Number 1.
23:13Adolf Hitler.
23:13At the summit
23:22of human cruelty
23:23stands the man
23:24who turned hatred
23:25and death
23:25into an industry.
23:27While others
23:27may have higher death counts,
23:29it was Hitler's intent
23:30which truly defines
23:31the concept of evil.
23:33Hitler didn't just kill,
23:34he built a vast,
23:36complex system
23:36of trains,
23:38camps,
23:38and gas chambers,
23:39solely designed
23:40to exterminate
23:41entire races of people.
23:43From starting
23:44the most destructive
23:45event in history
23:45to orchestrating
23:47the Holocaust,
23:48his legacy
23:48is the ultimate nightmare
23:50of what happens
23:50when cruelty
23:51goes unchecked.
23:52Hitler utilized
23:53modern technology
23:54and bureaucracy
23:55to commit
23:56ancient atrocities,
23:57turning genocide
23:58into a state project
23:59and permanently
24:00scarring
24:01the human conscience.
24:02His very name
24:03is synonymous
24:04with evil,
24:05a morbid benchmark
24:06of sorts,
24:07to which we compare
24:08the other great villains
24:09of human history.
24:10You will once again
24:11fight for a strong Germany.
24:14Fight, Hitler!
24:17Which terrifying individuals
24:19did we forget?
24:20Let us know
24:21in the comments below.
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