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00:14¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:42¡Suscríbete al canal!
01:02¡Suscríbete al canal!
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02:27¡Suscríbete al canal!
02:30¡Suscríbete al canal!
02:35¡Suscríbete al canal!
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02:48¡Suscríbete al canal!
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03:27¡Suscríbete al canal!
03:29¡Suscríbete al canal!
03:48¡No! ¡No, no, no, no!
03:59There's really only so much you can learn from textbooks and teachers.
04:04Real knowledge can only be gained through experience
04:08and taking chances that most people just don't have the stomach for.
04:15One of those chances might just turn out to change the world.
04:20And who knows, Johnny,
04:24you might still prove to be more important than you ever imagined.
04:44What's that? I don't know.
04:46This is a lot to take in.
04:50I understand.
04:52When did you realize?
04:54The moment I saw you in the command center.
04:57So I pulled your military DNA records and ran them against mine.
05:01When I was an inmate at the pit,
05:04Dr. Dulles used to let me watch some of your sessions with him.
05:07Those moments meant everything to me.
05:13Then once I was out of the pit, graduated, that's what Dulles liked to call it,
05:21and I finally had my freedom, he still refused to tell me anything more about you or where you lived.
05:28And then, 20 years later, here you are.
05:37I'm not really sure what I'm supposed to say.
05:41You don't have to say anything.
05:45This can be whatever you want it to be or don't.
05:51But I would very much like to get to know you.
05:58You have my eyes.
06:13Half-calf with cream and two sugars.
06:17Someone's paying attention.
06:19Details matter.
06:21But did you...
06:22Pour the decaf in first?
06:23Yes.
06:26Although, I haven't figured out why you do that.
06:30And I plan on remaining a mystery.
06:33Morales.
06:34What do we got?
06:36Facial rec picked up this photo.
06:37It was sent by a Harvard undergrad to his roommates.
06:40I assume we already accessed the phones remotely and scrubbed the image?
06:44Done.
06:44Don't tell Congress.
06:45And the students have no idea they just captured a real image of Sydney Fairfax.
06:49The Boston 9 case.
06:51Guess he was more than a person of interest.
06:53Boston 9.
06:54Why does that sound so familiar?
06:55It's an infamous unsolved case from 1990 to 1995.
06:58Nine bodies were found buried in the remote woods beside the Concord River,
07:02each with a section of their brain removed.
07:05It's never just a good old shot to the chest anymore, is it?
07:08What?
07:10You know what I meant.
07:12You know, these cuts look very professional.
07:15I mean, almost surgical.
07:17That's what the cops thought, too,
07:19which is why Sydney Fairfax, an esteemed professor, wound up on their radar.
07:23Along with other rumored suspects.
07:24But before they could build a case,
07:26he died in a one-car accident driving home from Harvard.
07:30Big air quotes on that one.
07:31Yeah, sounds to me like somebody figured out Fairfax was the Boston 9 guy.
07:35He didn't want the public to know the truth,
07:37so they disappeared him inside the pit.
07:38No, you're right.
07:39This is the first time the pit has faked the death of an inmate
07:41before they were caught for their crimes.
07:43What do we have on his therapies?
07:44From what I'm seeing, he was never officially treated.
07:47There are no therapies, no treatment logs, nothing.
07:49Whoever hit him in the pit really wanted to make sure he vanished.
07:52Okay, Morales, can you and the team pull up any public information,
07:55biographies, interviews, anything that he's done?
07:57Anything we can use to get inside his head.
07:59We're on it.
08:00Hey, sorry I'm late.
08:02You okay?
08:04Yeah.
08:05Yeah, I just sent my alarm at p.m.
08:07Like an idiot.
08:08Where are we headed?
08:09Boston.
08:10Hope you brought a jacket.
08:27Hello, professor.
08:32Hello, professor.
08:43Professor Allenson?
08:53Hello?
09:07Hippocampus.
09:11Hippocampus.
09:12Hippocampus.
09:13It's the hippopompomus.
09:17Professor?
09:19Hippocampus.
09:20Are you okay?
09:33Help me.
09:38Hippocampus.
09:41Help!
09:42Somebody help!
09:44Help!
10:03¡Suscríbete al canal!
10:15¡Suscríbete al canal!
10:45Structurally, this patient's brain is no different from your average serial killer.
10:52Yet this scan belongs to my assistant, Mr. Clive Allenson.
10:58So far, he hasn't killed anyone that we know of.
11:04So we have to ask, why is one a killer and the other my assistant?
11:11Where is that biological switch inside their minds?
11:15And what flips it from off to on?
11:21I love the sound of his own voice, doesn't he?
11:23Yeah, he does.
11:24Five years old, Fairfax was labeled a gifted child and wound up skipping several grades.
11:28In multiple interviews, he mentions feeling completely out of step with his much older classmates.
11:33It's my guess that over time, Fairfax's antisocial traits bloomed into a full-blown lifestyle.
11:38So he retreated into academia where his smarts were an asset, not a liability.
11:42Let me guess, he's one of those kids that went to Harvard at 16.
11:45Fifteen.
11:46At 20, he had his M.D. and his Ph.D., and at 25, he was a tenured professor and
11:51a leading voice in the convergence of criminal anatomy, neuroscience, and antisocial personality disorder.
11:57Doogie Howser, the serial killer.
11:59Now that is a show I would watch.
12:02Hey, what's the over-under on serial killers being geniuses?
12:06On TV?
12:06Yeah, pretty high.
12:08But not in real life.
12:10Sidney Fairfax was in his own class of minds, like a Ted Kaczynski, another Ivy leaguer, or a Rodney Alcala.
12:15Alcala?
12:16Dating game killer, UCLA.
12:18If these guys are such brilliant geniuses, why are they making such horrible life choices?
12:22Because he didn't see it as a horrible life choice.
12:25Sidney savored the power and control he felt over killing an innocent person.
12:29He could recognize his victim's distress, but didn't weight it.
12:33The consequences of his actions on others meant absolutely nothing to him.
12:36Plus, being a professor would have allowed him to hide in plain sight.
12:39I'm sure that was part of the thrill.
12:41Yeah, super thrilling stuff.
12:46Hey, Morales, what's up?
12:47I've been monitoring Boston PD scanners.
12:50Get this, Fairfax had an assistant named Clive Allenson.
12:53Yeah, we know who he is.
12:54Was.
12:55Allenson was just found dead in his lab at Harvard.
13:04Thank you.
13:05Thanks.
13:15Oh, that did not take the professor for a Hellraiser fan.
13:21If Morales can identify what these pins are, maybe we can figure out where Fairfax got them.
13:26What are we thinking?
13:27Torture?
13:28There's an injection site on his carotid.
13:30Fairfax drugged him.
13:32If he wanted to torture him, he would have left him wide awake.
13:34Okay, so what are you thinking?
13:35Like, this was punishment?
13:37Or whatever it was, we need to figure out where this mad scientist is going next.
13:42Morales, where are you with facial wreck, traffic cams, anything?
13:44Still nothing.
13:46What are you thinking, Bex?
13:50Let's find out if the kid who found him is still on campus.
13:54They think I did it.
13:56You told me to get a lawyer.
13:58I don't have a lawyer.
13:59Hey, Jack, I need you to do something for me, okay?
14:01Can you make two fists, both hands?
14:04Tight, squeeze, really hard.
14:07And release.
14:09You just went through something really horrible, and right now your brain is flooding your body.
14:12With epinephrine and cortisol.
14:15Yeah, by squeezing my fist, I am flushing the blood to my muscles where the chempost can be absorbed.
14:22Jack, we don't think that you killed Allison.
14:26Can you get me out of here?
14:27We can't, and we will.
14:30But we just need to ask you a few questions first.
14:38Can you tell us anything about those pins?
14:40Our colleague identified them as electrodes used in deep brain stimulation.
14:45That's right.
14:46They're incredibly cutting edge.
14:49Whoever killed Allenson, could they have gotten those pins in the lab?
14:52Yes, but I've never seen DBS electrodes implanted in those areas of the skull before.
14:59Why not?
15:00Because it's crazy.
15:01It's unsafe.
15:03It could cause strokes, hemorrhages.
15:06Do you know anyone who would implant them like that?
15:08No, but I can tell you whoever did definitely knew what they were doing.
15:11I mean, those were freehand burr holes.
15:14I don't follow.
15:15Only a highly skilled brain surgeon, trained in the latest technology, could have done that.
15:31Hey Shane, it's Sarah.
15:33I just wanted you to know my dad passed away a few nights ago in his sleep.
15:38I'm just glad he went peacefully.
15:40We can talk whenever.
15:43Shane.
15:45All right, Alice, I need you to pull up Tom Beecher's medical file.
15:48Yeah.
15:48Why not, since we're on the topic of barbaric experimental brain surgeries?
15:52How is it that a guy who's in prison for 30 years performs a cutting-edge surgery with technology that
15:57was developed decades after he wound up in the pit?
16:00You don't think Fairfax was just sitting on the bench?
16:02No, I think he was working down there.
16:04I mean, look, Tom Beecher, he had brain surgeries performed in the pit.
16:08We always assumed that it was Dulles, but what if Fairfax was the one actually performing them?
16:12I'm sending you Beecher's records now.
16:14Take a look at the letters next to Dulles' signature.
16:20SF, Sydney, Fairfax.
16:21Seems like Dulles wasn't the only one using pit inmates as specimens.
16:25There are at least 20 other patients with SF initials in their medical files.
16:29That's just after a 15-second search.
16:31Also explains why Fairfax's pit files never existed.
16:34He wasn't just an inmate.
16:35He was a visiting professor.
16:50Can I help you?
16:52Willis Sanchez?
16:53Yes.
16:54I'm with the university.
16:56My name is Dr. Fairfax.
17:05Dr. Charles, we were hoping that you could help us with another inmate.
17:09What can you tell us about Professor Sidney Fairfax?
17:12Was there any way that he continued his work when he was in the pit?
17:15Sidney's time in the pit was regrettable.
17:19And yes, he continued his research.
17:22He was even encouraged to by Dr. Dulles.
17:26Fairfax believed that serial killers' brains shared specific anatomical traits.
17:32That biology could predict an individual's potential for murder.
17:36So the population inside the pit offered him access to hundreds of ideal test subjects.
17:45Dr. Dulles was fascinated by Sidney's work.
17:51Despite the obvious moral erosion.
17:54Okay, what can you tell us about Fairfax's work in deep brain stimulation?
17:58Sidney believed in select patients.
18:01He could use DBS to stimulate dormant violent tendencies in non-violent subjects.
18:07Like flipping a biological switch in their minds.
18:10A noble pursuit of the goal simply had been to flip the switch off in violent offenders.
18:16Are you saying it wasn't?
18:17I'm saying when it comes to the pit, things are never as simple as they seem.
18:21If a switch can be turned off...
18:23It can be turned on.
18:25Exactly.
18:26Dulles believed it was impossible.
18:29Of course, inside the pit, there weren't any non-violent offenders to test his theory upon.
18:33So he used other inmates as disposable lab rats.
18:38Okay, so who is right?
18:39We'll never know.
18:41Dulles lost his mind, and without Dulles, Fairfax stayed locked in his cell.
18:46Until now.
18:52Morales, I've got a report of a 911 call about an injured woman wandering the streets of Cambridge.
18:57She had, quote, things drilled into her head.
19:00ID says Willa Sanchez.
19:02Get this to the team, and find out what hospital they're taking her to.
19:08All right, I'll have the doctor come speak with me.
19:11Okay.
19:11Thank you.
19:13I have been on this from the beginning.
19:15They're still working to stabilize Willa Sanchez, but they said they would let me know.
19:21Shane.
19:24Hey.
19:28Is Willa going to make it?
19:30Are you okay?
19:31You're just really out of it today.
19:35Does this have anything to do with why you were late this morning?
19:40Shane.
19:43You're a cratic son of a bitch.
19:46I thought it was Langley.
19:48Lazarus played me.
19:49Her whole, uh, balance of power speech?
19:52Garbage.
19:53What happened?
19:54She leveraged the attack on Cyrus' convoy to assume military control over all future prisoner
19:59transports.
19:59What?
20:00She can do that?
20:00She just did.
20:02You can see her now.
20:03It's one visitor at a time, and it has to be quick.
20:06The OR is already prepped.
20:22Willa.
20:29Willa, my name is Rebecca Henderson.
20:31I'm here to help you.
20:33I want to catch the man that did this to you.
20:43I'm late for class.
20:45No, you're in the hospital.
20:48Willa, can you hear me?
20:50No, no, no, no.
20:51I can't be late.
20:52I think we need to end this year.
20:53No, no, no, no.
20:54I can't be late.
20:56What are you going to be late for, Willa?
20:58Doctor.
20:59He's at class.
20:59Always at class.
21:00Which class will you be late for?
21:02No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
21:07no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
21:07She's getting agitated, it's enough.
21:09He locks the doors, it's can't be late.
21:11Who?
21:11Who locks the doors.
21:12The professor.
21:12Professor Fairfax.
21:14Professor Dulles.
21:18So, Willa Sanchez knew Dulles, Dulles knew Fairfax.
21:22Who knew Clive Allis?
21:24Who had the brain of a benign psychopath.
21:27You think Fairfax targeted Willa because she had the same type of brain as Allinson?
21:31What if Fairfax was still trying to win his argument with Dr. Dulles
21:33and used Dulles as former students at MIT to do so?
21:37Hey, Morales, we need everything that Pitt has on Dr. Dulles.
21:40Oh, I hate to say it, but we've exhausted everything we have on Dulles.
21:44Except he does have a daughter who lives in Boston, Sarah Dulles.
21:47Okay.
21:48All right, send us her information. Maybe she knows something.
21:50Yep, on it.
21:53She doesn't.
21:56What?
21:58She just cleared out her dad's place and sent me everything that she had.
22:05What the hell are you talking about?
22:07Okay, it's a long story, and I promise I'm going to explain,
22:10but if Dulles has anything on Fairfax in his files, it'll be at my apartment.
22:20Morales, I need you and Peck to go to Shane's.
22:22Get anything you can find.
22:24Calm's off.
22:26We've got to talk.
22:46Why?
22:47Why didn't you tell us about Sarah?
22:49I know.
22:49I should have told you earlier.
22:51But you thought we wouldn't find out.
22:53No.
22:54No, it's not that at all.
22:55It's complicated.
22:56Look, I told you I've been searching for my biological mother, right?
23:00And Dulles, he was my best shot at finding her.
23:03Sarah sent me a message about an hour ago.
23:05Dulles died a few days back.
23:09Days?
23:09You told us weeks ago that he was already dead.
23:12Guys, I'm sorry that I didn't tell you about this,
23:14but this was never about me keeping secrets from you.
23:16This was about me finding my mother.
23:20And I did.
23:25Actually, she found me.
23:33She's Lazarus.
23:44You knew.
23:46For how long?
23:49A couple days.
23:51I was going to tell you.
23:53But you didn't.
23:54Well, he kept it from you.
23:57Yeah, we could say the same thing about you.
23:59What?
24:01These aren't even close to the same thing.
24:02No, I didn't have to tell you about this.
24:05But I still did.
24:07Sure.
24:07Months later, after you intentionally lied to us.
24:10I have never withheld anything that could jeopardize a case.
24:14Never.
24:15Never.
24:15This was strictly personal.
24:25You know what?
24:29If he...
24:30No, no, no.
24:30Stop, stop, stop.
24:33What, am I supposed to go after him?
24:36Fairfax is out there.
24:38Let's focus on that.
24:42Well, all the gin joints and all the towns and all the world, Dulles' files were in Shane's
24:47apartment all along.
24:49Yeah.
24:50You don't seem surprised?
24:53I'm learning not to be shocked by anything when it comes to this job or anyone.
24:56No.
24:58No.
24:59No, Shane is solid.
25:00Whatever this is, he had a good reason.
25:07Um, wait.
25:10Look at this.
25:11It's Willis Sanchez.
25:15This is from a 2002 longitudinal study when Dulles was still chair at MIT.
25:23The cohort is 30 freshman students.
25:27Subjects show signs of reduced frontal lobe volume, reduced connections between the prefrontal
25:33cortex and the amygdala.
25:35That's the way Fairfax described the Bay Area Butcher's brain in his lecture.
25:39If everyone from this study has the same description, Dulles must have shared it with Fairfax at
25:47the pit.
25:50Any one of these people could be Fairfax's next victim.
26:17I think it was the 4th of July.
26:35Got it.
26:36Yes, ma'am.
26:36I'll let the team know.
26:37Guys, I've got locations on all 30 individuals who participated in the study.
26:41Only three are still in the area.
26:43Sending you their addresses now.
26:47None of these are far.
26:48We're on it.
27:14You've reached Sarah Dulles.
27:15I can't come to the phone right now.
27:17Please leave a message.
27:19Hey, Sarah.
27:21It's, uh, it's Shane.
27:24I'm actually in Boston, and I learned some things, and I was hoping we could talk.
27:32So, uh, I looked at your dad's place, but, um, you're not home.
27:40Aside from her�ben's street.
28:00I spoke.
28:03I'm not hungry.
28:04I'm sorry.
28:23Sir? Sir, I'm with the police.
28:31Oh, damn.
28:39Buddy?
28:40Okay, um, we need to get you some help, all right?
28:44But first, I need to know, where is Professor Fairfax?
29:02It's Shane.
29:04Hey.
29:05421 Pine Street, now.
29:10I'm gonna need you to put the plates down.
29:12Listen, listen, buddy, I do not want to hurt you.
29:15Help is on the way.
29:16I need you to stay where you are, okay?
29:23Just relax, okay?
29:25I'm here to help you.
29:27Oh, don't.
29:28Hey.
29:30Sorry.
29:37Okay.
29:37All right.
29:39All right.
29:40All right.
29:41No, no, no, no, no, no.
30:11de un alto ventral estriotum.
30:15Vamos a ver qué pasa cuando se pierda la pubertad.
30:20¡Shane!
30:23Ok.
30:24Solo quiero hacer mejor que la última vez.
30:26Si puedo hacer mejor, ¿puedo ir a casa?
30:29Puedes ir a casa cuando estamos terminando.
30:51Oh, ¿verdad?
30:54Splendid.
30:57No puedo decir cómo hablo de ti por los años.
31:00A pequeño niño nacido en la pared.
31:04Siempre había algo tan especial en ti.
31:07¿Recuerdas mí?
31:10¿No?
31:11No, no es bien si no.
31:14Pero creo que tú y yo
31:16son desindículos de la misma pregunta.
31:20¿Nurture o de la naturaleza?
31:25Vocês, esa es la edad de Dulles un이고.
31:29¡ współ!
31:30Estoy familiarizando lo que la recta es.
31:36Dulles querase hay una gran bela
31:38para demostrar que el ambiente muestra la mente más que la biología.
31:43Él quería tan desesperadamente para ser un niño normal,
31:47pero en el interior de él sabía que no podías ser.
31:52Y creo que tú, mi sujeto perfecto test,
31:56se ha vuelto a mí como algún acto de providencia divina
32:02para finalmente demostrar que estoy correcto.
32:15¡Psychopathy on demand is possible!
32:19¡Si solo Dulles were here to see this!
32:22¡Oh, you have something to add!
32:25¡I don't know what you're talking about!
32:27¿You want to see a killer's brain?
32:29¿Hmm?
32:30¿Why don't we open up your head?
32:32¡I'll bet you've taken more lives than I have, my friend!
32:34No, it's in the line of duty and self-defense.
32:37It was protecting people, it's not the same thing.
32:40I know you believe that, but when we're done here,
32:42you will understand the truth about yourself.
32:45You will understand what it means to be the son of Evelyn Lazarus.
32:49Or do you call her Caitlin?
32:51I know nothing about her anymore.
32:53I helped make Evelyn Lazarus what she is today.
32:56I think I know a thing or two.
32:57Your mother was just the beginning, Shane.
33:00But you, I think, may be the end.
33:04I have waited 30 years to get inside that little head of yours.
33:08And you can drill all the holes you want,
33:09but the only psychopath down here is you.
33:15Let's find out.
33:21That's a good boy.
33:32Sir.
33:37He's alive.
33:38Sir, can you hear me?
33:41Don't worry, this is just a mild sedative.
33:43It won't knock you out.
33:45But it will keep you from moving around too much
33:48once I start to cut.
33:50You'll be pleased to know that
33:52brain tissue has no pain receptors.
33:56Unfortunately, the scalp most certainly does.
33:59So if you can handle the drill,
34:01we're golden.
34:02So let's just give that a moment and begin.
34:14Shane, you're doing great.
34:29Dole screen.
34:32They don't like it when we scream.
34:37911, what's your emergency?
34:39You need an ambulance at 421 Pine.
34:43Where the hell is Shane?
34:50Shane can't have just disappeared into thin air.
34:52What are we missing?
34:54You need to talk to someone that knew Fairfax and tell us.
34:59Agent Henderson?
35:00Shane was taken by Sydney Fairfax.
35:02Look, I know you care about him as much as I do.
35:04How can I help?
35:06We tracked Fairfax to a townhouse owned by Dr. Dulles.
35:09There is no sign that Shane or Fairfax are here.
35:12You're in the right place, just not the right level.
35:14We searched the whole house.
35:15No.
35:16You haven't.
35:29Of course, there's a creepy doorway.
35:45Fairfax, freeze.
35:57Fairfax, freeze.
36:00Fairfax, freeze.
36:00There are no chances, okay?
36:01But I'm telling you that one flick of my finger, and it's the end for your friend here.
36:07Wait, stop!
36:10Shane is not your lab rat.
36:11He is brave and selfless.
36:14He is a decorated Marine, and yet he is way too humble to actually talk about that.
36:19Uh-huh.
36:19He also has the brain of a killer, so...
36:22It doesn't matter how many holes you drill.
36:24You won't change who Shane is, who he has chosen to be.
36:31He cares more deeply about people than anyone I have ever met.
36:35He is kind, he is loyal, and he can quite literally fall asleep wherever.
36:42What do you possibly hope to gain with these stupid, sentimental arguments?
36:48Time.
36:58He's down.
37:01I took you guys long enough.
37:04Yeah, we were pretty pissed.
37:06You know, you didn't need to get abducted to remind us how much we care about you.
37:12Worked, didn't it?
37:26Alright, the team just cleaned up everything at Dulles' place, and Fairfax's body's en route back to Cheyenne.
37:32What a day.
37:38So listen, I want to...
37:42I want to say something to you guys.
37:43Listen, we're good, man.
37:45We're sorry.
37:45You don't need to say anything.
37:47No, I do.
37:53So I've had this secret from the time I was 15.
37:59That's when I found out my biological mother was a murderer.
38:04Since then, I've been keeping it secret, you know, and I've spent so long just guarding it, keeping people at
38:11arm's length because of it, that I...
38:17I've never known how to put it down.
38:23But now, for the first time maybe ever, with you two, I have something to lose.
38:33So I'm sorry.
38:35I'm sorry.
38:43They're putting it all out in the open.
38:46I will drink to that.
39:03Got your message.
39:05Please come sit.
39:10I wanted to thank you for saving Cheyenne's life and for ridding the world of Dr. Sidney Fairfax.
39:20Um, yeah.
39:21Okay, I'm not really sure what this is, but you should know that Cheyenne has told us everything.
39:26Not everything.
39:28There are still some pieces I haven't shared with him.
39:31So what, you're going to share them with me now?
39:34There's no excuse for what I did, but there is context.
39:38Were you ever bullied in school, Rebecca?
39:41Bullies aren't just in school.
39:43Indeed.
39:44But mine were.
39:46And they were merciless.
39:49I was 17 years old, not comfortable in my own skin, and I was not equipped to navigate what was
39:56done to me.
39:58I didn't care about the consequences.
40:00All I cared about was if I became the killer, I'd no longer be the victim.
40:12What I didn't know was that there was something wrong with me.
40:17What I would later come to understand as homicidal psychopathy.
40:24But Dr. Dullison, the pig, cured me.
40:28I served my time, and now I serve my country.
40:41It's a very sympathetic story.
40:45Reform is possible, Rebecca.
40:50And I'm living proof.
41:03Hey, uh, how'd it go with Lazarus?
41:07I think she's one of the most dangerous sociopaths I've ever met.
41:11And whatever she's up to, we're going to stop her.
41:16Thank you.
41:25Thank you.
41:54Gracias por ver el video.
41:57Gracias por ver el video.
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