Cindy Zarzycki

This entry was posted on Saturday, October 10th, 2009 at 6:14 pm

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cindy zarzycki

CategoriesU.S. newsWorld newsPoliticsBusinessSportsEntertainmentHealthTech &amp scienceTravelLocal newsWeatherBrowseVideoPhotosDateline NBCThe Hansen FilesInternationalHealthPhoto galleriesCrime reportsNewsmakers’Catch a Predator’Quick CutsDisable Fly-outDisappearance at the Dairy QueenCindy Zarzycki went missing at age 13 was her crush’s dad to blameDateline NBCCindy Zarzycki disappeared in 1986.VideoA poem for Cindy JoHear Cindy’s niece at the memorial service recite a poem about the aunt she never knew.Dateline NBCMost popular Dateline pages 1. The Mysterious Death of a Titan 2. Disappearance Before Dawn3. In the Bedroom4. The Man Behind The Mask 5. A Dose of ControversySign up for the newsletterYour E-mail Address:Windows LiveTM ID Required More NewslettersFriday, Oct. 16: Secrets of ‘The Lost Symbol’Friday, Oct. 9: The long hunt for a masked rapistFriday, Oct. 2: Jaycee Dugard’s kidnappingFriday, Sept. 25, 9 p.m. ET: ‘The Michael Jackson Tapes’This Friday, Sept. 18: Dateline’s two-hour season premiereMost popular Most viewed Top rated Most e-mailedMakeover Her first haircut in 15 yearsCops: Man kills fiancee day before weddingColumbine killers mom: No inkling on sonCaptured Saudi vows: I will fight again4,000 foreigners join Taliban, minister saysMost viewed on msnbc.comTop Rwandan genocide suspect arrestedHealth care reform: Saving American livesPot legalization gains momentum in CaliforniaFBI arrests dozens for ‘phishing’ ID schemeEric Braeden talks about shocking Y&ampR exitMost viewed on msnbc.comCops: Man kills fiancee day before wedding6 things you forgot to childproofColumbine killers mom: No inkling on sonAnd the best country to live in is …Obama pushes consumer protection agencyMost viewed on msnbc.comWeb-exclusive interrogation videoInvestigators interrogate Art ReamWeb exclusive: See more from Detective McLaughlin and Investigator Leibow’s interrogation tape with suspect Art Ream.Art Ream: ‘I never tried to lie”My life is over’

By Dennis MurphyCorrespondentDateline NBCupdated 6:50 p.m. ET April 17, 2009Dennis MurphyCorrespondent ProfileDo you remember making mix tape cassettes for your friends All these years later, that’s something a best friend recalls about Cindy.Theresa Olechowski: Dance music. She loved to dance.Maybe the soundtrack to your life in the middle 80’s was like Cindy Zarzycki’s. Another, Cyndi — Cyndi Lauper — Motley Crue, and especially hometown favorite: Madonna.Story continues below advertisement your ad hereThe older sister she swapped clothes with still laughs about it.Connie Johnson: We had a song. I still remember every move to this day. Madonna’s Borderline and Cindy and I would dance to that song over and over upstairs.In the middle 80s, a kid like Cindy didn’t live in a big universe. Hers was a blue-collar Detroit suburb known back then as East Detroit. Neighbors mostly assembled cars or stamped out the parts for them.The borders of this teenage girl were home, school, church and the mall for movies, meeting boys and messing around. In the warm months, there were rundown ballfields for softball games, a family passion. And, of course, there was the friendly Dairy Queen down the street after softball. Eddie Jr.’s the kid brother.Dennis Murphy: what did Cindy get, do you rememberEddie Jr.: Vanilla, probably swirled ice cReam cone. We always got the twist with the chocolate and…Connie Johnson: The sprinkles laughsEddie Jr.: Like, vanilla with sprinkles.It was the early spring of 1986 and Cindy 13, about to be 14 would be playing first base and batting clean-up for her church softball team. Just two weeks before it all happened, she was playing catch outside with Eddie Jr., when Cindy piped up and asked her dad if he’d help coach the team that coming season.Ed Zarzycki: It was kinda exciting because it was something that, as a father, I could connect with her. It hadn’t been easy for Cindy’s father–raising a son and two daughters by himself after the marriage broke up. Ed Zarzycki was a school custodian and what exactly to do with a young daughter, other than love her, perplexed him a bit. So this new softball connection was a welcome one between father and daughter.Ed Zarzycki: I mean, I had no problems with her. It was a joy to watch her come home from school and that, cause she had so much enthusiasm, you know And she always had a smile.And not at all a shy kid. There was that time the summer before on a family camping trip across the river in Canada.Ed Zarzycki: And in the middle of the night, when the bonfire was going and at that time, Greenwood had that song.Dennis Murphy: I’m proud to be an American, Lee Greenwood.Ed Zarzycki: Proud to be an American. And she was just singing that song just as loud. That was the type of person. She enjoyed life.”And in the last couple of years, she’d discovered boys.Eddie Jr.: All I remember is she used to come home from school and write boys’ names, like 50 times… I love Scott. or I love Dave.The boy’s name she was writing the most that spring, filling notebooks, was Scott.Theresa Olechowski, Cindy’s best friend since the second grade, like sisters in their matching too-cool-for-school white boots with bucklesTheresa Olechowski: We wore those shoes everywhere…was at the mall the day Cindy’s crush on 14-year old Scott began.Theresa Olechowski: Scott had a couple of friends with him. And we passed by. We started talkin’ to them. They started talkin’ to us. And– I think they had a lot of the same interests.Cathy Bouford was Cindy’s other great friend from school and sleepovers.Cathy Bouford: She was really, really head-over-heels in love with him, but it wasn’t anything like a long, deep relationship, so…Dennis Murphy: This is puppy love InfatuationCathy Bouford: Puppy love. Yes, exactly.Click for related contentSee the map of the gravesite drawn by the suspectMissing and Exploited Children Web siteBut the place where puppy love blossomed – here at the Macomb Mall – would a few weeks later get Cindy in hot water with her father. This mall was about 7 miles from Cindy’s house and she had standing orders from her dad never to walk home. But she did. And a single dad, raising a teenager, needed his rules followed.Ed Zarzycki: So I had grounded her. Dennis Murphy: Which meant what Come home right after schoolEd Zarzycki: Right after school. You know, to stay at the house.Grounded. No mall. No Scott. They went to different schools.Theresa Olechowski: I think she was probably frustrated like any 13-year old would be when grounded. But then, at that time, the most important thing on her mind was Scott. You know, How am I gonna talk to Scott And how am I gonna see ScottAfter school Friday April 18, 1986, Cindy said goodbye to her friends Cathy and Theresa and reported directly home as per her father’s punishment. But the next evening, Saturday, Cindy bolted from house arrest.Cathy Bouford: Well, she called me and wanted to come over. And she escaped her house. Came over to my house between 6:00 and 6:30.Dennis Murphy: She wasn’t supposed to be thereCathy Bouford: No. The two girls talked about–what elseScott, a boy Cathy had never met. Cindy used the phone to finalize surreptitious plans: She would go to the Dairy Queen and get a ride to a surprise birthday party planned for Scott the next day, Sunday. Cathy would be the alibi.VideoA poem for Cindy JoHear Cindy’s niece at the memorial service recite a poem about the aunt she never knew.Dateline NBCCathy Bouford: She had told Mr. Zarzycki that she was going to church with me the next morning.Come the next morning, Cindy told her kid brother she was going out for awhile.Eddie, Jr.: I’m like, where And you know we’re supposed to be together, you know You know Dad’s not gonna be happy with us. And then she was like, I’m going and then just stay here. And then she started walking and then I followed her. And she’s like, Go home. Go back, and that’s when she really changed her voice and like scReamed at me to go back, I wasn’t supposed to come there.Dennis Murphy: You can’t be the tag-along kid brotherEddie, Jr.: Right. Yup.The infatuated 13-year old softball ace–in her cool white boots and jeans purse–pivoted and strode to the Dairy Queen. And then, she vanished.

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I don't see a thread on her.PUBLISHED: Saturday, February 2, 2008Murder charges pendingHearing, testimony brings family 'closer to closure,' dad saysBy Gordon WilczynskiMacomb Daily Staff WriterThe primary suspect in the disappearance of a 13-year-old East Detroit girl in 1986 was bound over Friday evening and will face multiple murder charges when he's arraigned Feb. 11. Cindy Zarzycki was an East Detroit Kelly Middle School student when she mysteriously disappeared after a scheduled meeting with her new boyfriend's father. Arthur Nelson Ream, who owned a flooring shop in Roseville and was the father of Scott Ream, Zarzycki's friend, was bound over by 38th District Judge Norene Redmond to face charges in Macomb County Circuit Court. Redmond made the decision after nearly five hours of arguments and objections about testimony from Macomb County Assistant Prosecutor Steve Kaplan and defense attorney Timothy Koehler. &quotWe're getting closer to closure,&quot said Edward Zarzycki, Cindy's father, who attended the hearing with his family. &quotAll we have to do now is get him to tell us where he buried Cindy's body for complete closure.&quot Redmond said that even though the evidence against Ream is circumstantial, there was enough testimony from five witnesses on Friday to believe Cindy Zarzycki is dead and that Ream killed her. &quotBased on the testimony of the witnesses, she wouldn't run away, she had no mental illness and spoke to school friends on a daily basis,&quot Redmond said. &quotHer death was the result of criminal agency and Mr. Ream made statements to police that he committed the crime.&quot Ream is scheduled to be arraigned in Macomb Circuit Court at 11:30 a.m. on Feb. 11. He faces charges of first- and second-degree murder. Witnesses on Friday testified that Zarzycki told them she was going to meet Arthur Ream, the father of a boy she was seeing at the time, and he was going to take her to a surprise birthday party in Pontiac. Ream, 57, has spent several years in prison after he was convicted of rape in an unrelated case. Ream's former brother-in-law, John Barabash, 48, said he was 14 years old in 1984 when Ream picked up a hitchhiker in Shelby Township and raped her. He said Ream told him after he was convicted that he would kill the next girl he rapes so that she cannot testify against him. Barabash said Ream often picked up hitchhikers and raped them. He said he couldn't do much because he was only a young teenager at the time. Zarzycki was 13 years old when she disappeared, and Scott Ream was 15. Scott died several years later in a fiery car crash on a Detroit expressway. One witness testified that Zarzycki told her the night before she disappeared that she was nervous to go to the birthday party with Arthur Ream, but she didn't know why. The witness, Catherine Marie Bouford, said Zarzycki told her she was to meet Ream at a Dairy Queen on Nine Mile Road in what was then East Detroit. &quotShe was making plans to meet Scott's dad between 9 and 11 a.m.,&quot Bouford said. &quotShe was nervous. Why, I don't know.&quot Bouford said that on her way to St. Basil's Catholic Church with her family the morning Zarzycki disappeared, her family drove by the Dairy Queen and she saw a white van parked on the side. Police said Ream in April of 1986 had a white van. When asked if Zarzycki told her father she was going to the birthday party in Pontiac, Bouford said no. She said he wouldn't have let her go with a man in his 30s. After Ream was bound over to face murder charges, Kaplan and Eastpointe detectives Derek McLaughlin and Kelly Shock said an interrogation and investigative firm from Downer's Grove, Ill., Wicklander &amp Zulowski, helped in the interview of Ream. Kaplan said Ream admitted killing Zarzycki, but wouldn't tell investigators the method he used. Kaplan said he and police believe the body is buried someone near Grayling, where Ream owned a house. Police said on Jan. 9, 2008, Ream started drawing a map for them of where the body is buried. Kaplan said police have not yet checked the area. Kaplan also said after the preliminary examination that police have Ream's old jewelry box in which he saved Zarzycki's picture. &quotHe was involved in seven rapes,&quot said Detective Shock. &quotHe has been convicted on two of them and there are four others not including Cindy.&quot http://www.macombdaily.com/stories/020208/locn3001.shtml

PUBLISHED: Thursday, July 10, 2008Killer points police to teen he murdered 22 years ago'We can move on with our lives' family saysBy Jameson Cook and Gordon WilczynskiMacomb Daily Staff Writers Arthur Nelson Ream, a convicted murderer, is escorted to a site in a field near 23 Mile and North Avenue where he said he buried Cindy Zarzycki 22 years ago. With Ream are Eastpointe Detective Derek McLaughlin and Macomb Sheriff's Deputy Lionel Gale. Macomb Daily photo by David N. Posavetz The remains of a 13-year-old Eastpointe girl who was murdered 22 years ago were found by police late Wednesday in Macomb Township woods, after her killer revealed the burial site. Cindy Zarzycki's family members – who Wednesday identified a blue denim purse and its contents found with her body – expressed relief and thankfulness that Cindy's killer, Arthur N. Ream, 59, finally made the disclosure. &quotGod answered our prayers,&quot Cindy's older sister, Connie Johnson of Howell, told reporters shortly after police informed the family about the find. &quotThis is relief, you can't understand the amount of relief this is,&quot said Cindy's father, Ed, of Lexington. &quotWe get to bury her on our own terms instead of some criminal in the middle of the night,&quot said Ed Zarzycki Jr., Cindy's younger brother who was the last family member to see her alive, as he held back tears. &quotNow that we have her body she can be put to rest and we can move on with our lives.&quot The identification was virtually positive after Ed Jr. recognized homemade musical cassette tapes of popular musical groups at the time that he and Cindy had made. One song was &quotWe Built This City&quot by Jefferson Starship. Cindy Zarzycki went missing April 20, 1986, after she planned to meet Ream, the father of a boy she knew, at a Dairy Queen on Nine Mile Road near her home. The investigation was reopened several years ago by Eastpointe police and later by the cold case unit of the Macomb Prosecutor's Office. Ream was convicted June 18 of first-degree murder by a Macomb County Circuit Court jury following a trial in which prosecutors presented overwhelming circumstantial evidence but no body. He is facing July 22 a life sentence without parole. Ream, housed at Macomb Correctional Facility in Lenox Township, agreed Tuesday to point police in the right direction and Wednesday twice went to the area with police to show them the spot, although she was eventually found about 10 feet away, according to Eastpointe Police Chief Mike Lauretti. The location was southwest of the intersection of 23 Mile Road and North Avenue, about a half-mile south off 23 Mile. It was within about 20 feet of a branch of the Clinton River. The body was not enclosed in anything, and some of her clothing was found with her, Lauretti said. Eastpointe police Detective Derek McLaughlin is credited with helping to influence Ream to disclose the location even though Ream had nothing to gain since his conviction. Ream and Macomb prosecutors during jury deliberations prior to the verdict discussed a plea to a reduced charge if Ream provided the information, but a deal was never reached. &quotIt's been a lot of years,&quot McLaughlin said Wednesday. &quotIt's a sad story, not the conclusion we wanted, but we're glad that we're able to resolve the case and give the family some closure.&quot &quotThis was the only thing left in the case, I can't say why he did what he did,&quot Macomb County Prosecutor Eric Smith said Wednesday. The family had planned to conduct a memorial service shortly after Ream was convicted, but McLaughlin told them to hold off. He believed that Ream wanted to first see if he could &quotbeat the charges&quot at trial, said Karen Hoeft, Cindy Zarzycki's aunt who like other family and friends left her job early Wednesday at Chrysler Corp. in Rochester Hills to wait for the recovery of the body. Now the family will conduct a service. Schultz Funeral Home in Eastpointe will handle the arrangements, and she will be buried in Burtchville, north of Port Huron, in St. Clair County, according to Ed Zarzycki Sr. She said now is the time to put this case to rest and have pleasant memories of Cindy. &quotWe are all Christians so we have to forgive,&quot Hoeft said. Ed Zarzycki, Cindy's brother, who had begged to go with his sister to Dairy Queen as she walked down Roslyn toward Nine Mile, said it was his biggest regret in connection with the case, &quotI'm sorry I wasn't there. I love her she's looking down on us.&quot Several family members and friends of Cindy sat and waited in lawn chairs much of the day Wednesday as police – armed with a writ and search warrant both OK'd by Judge Mary Chrzanowski and accompanied for much of the day by the judge – began searching and digging with the help of specialists from the Michigan State University Anthropology Department. McLaughlin and fellow Eastpointe Detective Kelly Shock led the search, which included bringing in Michigan State Police cadaver dogs. The police personnel painstakingly removed mounds of dirt, one layer at a time, so that any remains police might find would not be disturbed. Ream's attorney, Timothy Kohler, said Wednesday his client drew a map of the area and pinpointed several spots he thought were good possibilities. Kohler said Ream had vivid memories of the grave site because he was familiar with the area. One report that could not be immediately confirmed said that Ream at one time owned the property. &quotHe would take flowers to the grave,&quot Kohler said. &quotHe did it until 1997.&quot &quotThat's kind of sick,&quot Karen Hoeft remarked. Ream allegedly told McLaughlin on Tuesday that he often would drive his car about one-half mile through the field to a bridge that crossed the creek. The property has since been sold to Alvin Kukuk, a former state lawmaker and Macomb Township supervisor. Kukuk rents out a house on the property. The residents Wednesday accommodated police as police and media vehicles parked in front of the home. &quotI'm very surprised,&quot said Kukuk. &quotI bought the property a number of years ago from someone else but never knew this man.&quot Hoeft, who testified in the trial, said the family appreciates the efforts of everyone involved in the case. And no matter the horror of how Cindy's life ended, family members said they try to remain focused on the positive memories of the young girl who was just starting to &quotspread her wings&quot into her teenage years. Another aunt of Cindy, Deborah Holk, said she recently dreamed of her mother and Cindy's grandmother, Frances Zarzycki, who has been dead for nine years. She said they had a great relationship and she remembers how much Cindy loved her grandmother. &quotShe loved coming to my house and I miss that – even though I still have those great memories,&quot Holk said. &quotMy late husband and I had a boat and we always took her on it. She loved to have picnics on the boat.&quot http://macombdaily.com/stories/071008/loclocal01.shtml

PUBLISHED: Friday, August 8, 2008Child killer gets life, no paroleFamily of Cindy Zarzycki reject Ream's attempts to explain what happenedBy Jameson Cook and Gordon Wilczynski Macomb Daily Staff Writers Arthur Ream watches in Macomb County Circuit Court on Thursday as he is sentenced to life in prison without parole for the murder of Cynthia Zarzycki 22 years ago. Macomb Daily photo by David Posavetz Advertisement Called a coward but still denying he committed murder, Arthur Ream was ordered to spend the rest of his life in prison Thursday by a judge for killing 13-year-old Cindy Zarzycki 22 years ago.&quotYou, Ream, are not a man you preyed on an innocent little girl who trusted you. … You are a coward,&quot Cindy's younger brother, Ed Zarzycki, tearfully told Ream in Macomb County Circuit Court.Ream, 59, will spend the rest of his life in prison without a chance for parole for the April 1986 death of Cindy following a June trial and Macomb County jury's first-degree-murder verdict. Ream lured her to a Dairy Queen in Eastpointe on the pretense of going to a birthday party for his son, a friend of Cindy's, but killed her and buried her in Macomb Township woods.Ed Zarzycki, the last known person to see his sister alive on that April 20, has lived with the unknown for more than two decades.&quotI would pick up prank calls and make sure it was not her,&quot he said. &quotI saw my dad take a lie detector test even though I knew he did nothing wrong because he is the nicest person in the world.&quotReam, who has prior convictions for sexually assaulting young girls, repeated his claim to a probation officer preparing the sentencing report that Cindy died from an accident at his carpet warehouse in Roseville, and told the court he did not sexually assault her.&quotNot everything is the way it seems,&quot he said in court.Ream in court offered to write a letter to Cindy's father, Ed, to explain in detail what happened, and take a lie detector test to show there was no sexual assault.&quotI'd like to let them know what happened,&quot he said. &quotI'm willing to take a test that I did not rape Cindy or touch her in any sexual way.&quotI know they have no reason to believe me. … Maybe it would be better for both of us if he knew everything.&quotBut his offer didn't sit well with Ed Zarzycki and his father, also Ed. Both said they are pleased that Ream agreed after his conviction to show authorities where Cindy was buried, but that is all they want from him now.Ed Sr. said following the hearing that Ream appears &quotmore confused.&quot&quotI think the biggest part is finding her remains and having a burial,&quot Ed Sr. said. &quotHaving a final resting place for her is my biggest concern.&quotEd Jr. said &quotat one time I did want to sit down with him&quot but since the trial and with Ream revealing the burial site, he no longer desires it.He said, &quotI've moved on,&quot from wanting to talk to him.Cindy's older sister, Connie Johnson, said she would be willing to listen to what he had to say if it &quothelps me sleep better at night.&quotPolice found some of Cindy's remains in July, buried southwest of 23 Mile Road and North Avenue in Macomb Township. Ream pointed them to the spot.Police and family members believe the remains are Cindy's since they were accompanied by some of her belongings and clothing, but results of DNA tests have not yet provided the definitive result.Once certain identity is made within two months, the family will conduct a memorial service at Schultz Funeral Home in Eastpointe and burial in Lakeport.Judge Mary Chrzanowski of Macomb County Circuit Court credited Ream with revealing Cindy's burial site.&quotIt way very important they learned of that,&quot she said. &quotThat put final closure to Cindy's life. It took a big man to do that because you didn't have to. But the sad part about the case is that we're never going to know the truth. The truth is what the jury said and we have to live with that.&quotMore than two dozen spectators filled the courtroom for the sentencing, with many family and friends of Cindy Zarzycki hugging each other as well as police and Macomb prosecutors after the hearing.Sue Rizzo nee Fisher, who lived across the street from Cindy's grandmother in Harrison Township and knew Cindy well, said outside the courtroom Cindy's disappearance changed her life forever. She has two sons, 15 and 17 years old, and Rizzo said she never allows them to go out alone. &quotYou grow up with those memories and you're scared,&quot she said. &quotMy mom used to let us go to the park and never had to worry about us. I do now.&quotEd Sr. said he was thankful for the support and appreciative of many comments on the Web site of Schultz Funeral Home.Ream's attorney, Timothy Kohler, filed for a new trial immediately following the hearing. He asks the judge to throw out the first-degree verdict because there was no proof of premeditation, he said. The case against Ream was circumstantial.Kohler also said he may have evidence that could help back up Ream's claim that Cindy was with Scott Ream on the day she died. Ream has said that after dropping off Scott and Cindy at the store, he went to his Harrison Township home and she accidentally fell from an elevator in Arthur Ream's warehouse.Testimony during the trial showed Scott was in Texas on the day of the slaying, accompanying Arthur Ream's co-worker who traveled there to prepare for sale of a property.But Kohler said he has evidence that Scott was not in Texas at the time.Ream's ex-wife also has said that they were not together and he was not living at the Harrison Township home at the time she denied another claim by Ream that they went shopping that day.Kohler also wants a new trial based on the potential new evidence that came with locating Cindy's remains. The remains could show no proof of trauma to her body, he said.Also in the motion, Kohler said he claims &quotprosecutorial misconduct,&quot contending that Kaplan improperly connected Ream to &quotrape&quot and &quotfetish&quot for young girls during his closing arguments.Ream's prior convictions were excluded from the trial, due to rulings by Chrzanowski.Ream likely will appeal, too, Kohler said.http://macombdaily.com/stories/080808/loclocal01.shtml

PUBLISHED: Friday, August 8, 2008A sister's statementFollowing is the statement made in court Thursday by Connie Johnson, the older sister of Cindy Zarzycki, who was murdered by Arthur Ream more than 22 years ago. &quotI am Cindy Zarzycki's sister I speak on her behalf today because the defendant's cruel and evil actions took away her civil rights: her life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. This defendant, guilty of first-degree murder for a series of rapes against innocent young girls, killing and burying Cindy along with the truth of where she was and what happened to her for more than two decades, denies guilt, blames his dead son, has shown no regret, no remorse.I ask that he answer now to your honor as you send him to prison according to the laws of this state, for the rest of his life, without any chance of parole, ever. Others may be forgiving, yet he must pay for his actions. Today he will answer to this court, someday also to his maker.I want to thank God for all that he has done for our family. I know that was Jesus that held Cindy close. I stand here knowing she is with him today in heaven.I would like to thank everyone that has prayed for Cindy and our family. Thank you to everyone that would not give up on my baby sister. I truly thank all of those who worked very hard to bring Cindy back to us, those that brought justice and truth to what happened to her.I thank you, your honor, for bringing honor to your courtroom and to my sister through this trial. I thank the jury for hearing, seeing and knowing the truth.The Bible says in John 8:32, 'and you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.' Our family now knows the truth and Cindy now has been set free.&quothttp://macombdaily.com/stories/080808/loclocal03.shtml

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