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Frigid

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This thread is going to be news articles which deal with the law or the legal profession, for interest or for assignments :p

4 items of interest today:


Legal fees none of your business, say lawyers
"The NSW Law Society has railed against the State Government's review into the way the legal profession bills clients, saying firms should be free to charge what they want and that any review "is unnecessary and intrusive"."

Federalism isn't working: Abbott
"Conservatives no longer believe in Australia's tiered federal system because the states were wasteful and inclined towards socialism, the Health Minister, Tony Abbott, has said."

No spear guns, please, it may upset the jurors
"Knuckledusters, spear guns, Mace, hammers, knives, horseshoes and even a bottle of petrol: these are some of the 100,000 items surrendered to court officials every year, in the name of keeping the courts safe."

Why some are more equal than others
"When a person or organisation engages a lawyer, it is common knowledge that confidentiality between the two parties is protected under client privilege. This also applies on tax matters.

In Australia, however, communications between accountants and their clients on tax matters are not given such protection. The profession is not happy with the disparity and some believe it could be costing tax accountants significant business."


Please post law-related articles below :)
 

Frigid

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Altered states
"A new push to create more states in Australia is coming from country people who think they are being ignored by the big cities that eat up all their taxes. Daniel Lewis reports."
 

MoonlightSonata

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Frigid said:
Altered states
"A new push to create more states in Australia is coming from country people who think they are being ignored by the big cities that eat up all their taxes. Daniel Lewis reports."
Hahaha

Ah dear...
 

waterfowl

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NSW, with a population of 6.7 million, is more populous than 39 of America's 50 states, and while California has a population of 34 million, it is home to only one in eight Americans whereas NSW is home to one in three Australians. He also quotes the eminent historian Geoffrey Blainey: "The sad fact is that the newest state in Australia is Queensland, created more than 140 years ago. Australia has created no new state since 1859. The United States in contrast has created close to 20.
Why compare us to the US...certainly lost my vote, although it seems a stupid idea in the first place.
 

Frigid

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One man takes on an island
"Justice Beaumont has been made an Officer (AO) of the Order of Australia today for his judicial work in Australia and the Pacific. In the law and justice division, he is joined by his fellow Federal Court judge Annabelle Bennett, Roddy Meagher and Simon Sheller from the NSW Supreme Court and the Perth barrister Malcolm McCusker."

Shortest possible sentence for priest convicted of indecent assault
"A Sydney Catholic priest who pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting an adult man 22 years ago, when homosexual sex was illegal, has received an extremely rare, and short, sentence.

Terence Norman Goodall, 64, was yesterday sentenced to a "rising of the court" for fondling the genitals of a 29-year-old Catholic teacher at a Cronulla public pool after the two had shared a candlelit dinner.

...Goodall was charged under pre-1984 legislation, which meant consent was irrelevant in the case."


Judge wary of judicial material online
"The internet should be censored to purge any information likely to prejudice a trial, according to a Supreme Court judge.

Justice Virginia Bell wants such material wiped from the internet to prevent jurors conducting their own investigations into cases on which they are sitting, The Australian reported."
 

MoonlightSonata

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Frigid said:
Judge wary of judicial material online
"The internet should be censored to purge any information likely to prejudice a trial, according to a Supreme Court judge.

Justice Virginia Bell wants such material wiped from the internet to prevent jurors conducting their own investigations into cases on which they are sitting, The Australian reported."
That really is a completely unfeasible idea. With respect, her honour Justice Bell has no idea what she's talking about on this

The Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance branded the call "silly and unworkable", while the internet industry said it would be impossible to police websites.
Exactly
 

Frigid

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Legal heavy joins battle for van parkhttp://www.smh.com.au/news/National...le-for-van-park/2005/01/26/1106415667621.html
"A lawyer who successfully argued that a caravan park should not be bulldozed for a unit development because it would have an adverse social impact has been enlisted by a group of low-income residents to stop a similar project in Sydney."

Lawyers, Gunns and forests
"Political protest will carry a high personal cost if a timber company successfully sues logging protesters. Andrew Darby reports.

...Then it [a blockade against a timber company] became part of a 216-page writ in a $6.3 million legal action against 20 individuals and green groups mounted by the timber giant Gunns and a small harvesting partnership, T&H Investments."


The long road to justicehttp://www.smh.com.au/news/National/The-long-road-to-justice/2005/01/26/1106415665862.html
"It's 15 years since McDonald's issued writs against activists in London over claims they made about its fast food - but the notorious McLibel case is still in the courts.

The two Britons who took on the global corporation continue to fight a ruling that they defamed McDonald's by claiming in a leaflet that it damaged its customers, workers and the environment."


Making crime payhttp://www.smh.com.au/news/Unusual-Tales/Making-crime-pay/2005/01/26/1106415667846.html
"A bank robber has been allowed to claim the cost of a pistol used in a hold-up as a legitimate business expense.

A Dutch court has permitted the 46-year-old man to set the €2000 ($3400) cost of the gun against his gross proceeds of €6750, gained during his raid on a bank in the southern town of Chaam. The judge at Breda Criminal Court duly reduced his fine by the same amount, while sentencing him to four years in jail."


The war on tort
"Pity America’s trial lawyers. George Bush has made tort reform a priority of his second term in office and momentum is gathering behind measures to change the system. Next week Arlen Specter, a Republican senator, is set to introduce a bill that is intended to break the deadlock over asbestos litigation while limiting the exposure of firms and insurance companies to future claims. Bill Frist, the Senate majority leader, hopes to bring a bill to change the rules on class-action lawsuits to the chamber’s floor by the week after. Yet more action is promised to limit pay-outs in medical-malpractice lawsuits."

Harrying the Nazishttp://www.economist.com/world/europe/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3576453
[Opinion Article] "...Prince Harry, whose decision to wear a Nazi uniform to a fancy-dress party in Britain may be about to trigger Europe-wide legislation. Franco Frattini, the European Union's commissioner for justice and home affairs, declared to Italian newspapers this week that “EU action is urgent and has to forbid very clearly Nazi symbols in the European Union.”

Indeed, Mr Frattini plans to put the idea of such a ban on the agenda of the next meeting of European justice ministers, on January 27th."
 
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Frigid

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It's riches to rags as fashion matriarch and sons guilty of $15m tax fraud
"The sense of relief was palpable - it had been one of the state's longest, and most keenly fought, criminal trials.

As fraud cases go, it was unheard of. For eight months, the jury had listened as the court heard from 39 witnesses in an attempt to shed light on the complicated accounting history of the socialite and eastern suburbs fashion matriarch Ida Ronen."


Two bus passes or pay price - students told
"More than 250,000 children will have to carry two passes to board the bus or face paying to get to school - and if they lose both passes it will cost $20 to have them replaced.

From Monday, the transport "smartcard" will be extended to 300,000 schoolchildren entitled to free travel on Sydney's private buses, after a successful small-scale trial on 7000 students in the second half of last year."
 

Frigid

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History in the dockhttp://www.smh.com.au/articles/2005/01/30/1107020262199.html

"[Judge Dowling's] notes provide a fascinating insight into the perils and pitfalls of living in early Sydney, writes Michael Pelly.

...

The case would have been one of the first Dowling recorded after his arrival from England in March 1828 to join Forbes on the court. While the newspapers of the day - The Australian and Sydney Gazette - reported the facts and the findings, there were no law reports that explained the legal reasoning.

The Supreme Court was the colony's first superior court of record and would establish precedents that would reflect its social and commercial customs. The common law, adopted from England, would have to be modified to reflect the peculiarities of the settlement.

For the next 16 years, Dowling faithfully recorded the facts, the arguments of counsel and the judge's findings in thousands of cases. Even after he became chief justice in 1837, he would transcribe his shorthand at night and keep important cases in bound volumes."


Laying down the law in a new landhttp://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Laying-down-the-law-in-a-new-land/2005/01/30/1107020263948.html

"The first 20 years of the NSW Supreme Court provide a fascinating insight into life in NSW as it began to loosen the apron strings of mother England.

Founded in 1824, the court handled everything from minor debts to murders. But there were no official court reporters to record evidence until 1911 and no formal law reports until 1863.

When the former law reporter James Dowling took his seat on the court in 1828, he resolved to take notes on the cases he heard. Over the next 16 years he filled 268 notebooks with thousands of cases.

He succeeded the first chief justice, Francis Forbes, in 1837, and before he died in office in 1844, aged 57, Dowling had chosen 465 cases for publication."


We have compensation case, says Habib lawyerhttp://www.smh.com.au/news/National...ys-Habib-lawyer/2005/01/30/1107020264570.html

There were grounds for the former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Mamdouh Habib to seek compensation from the US Government for his detention, Mr Habib's US lawyer, Joe Margulies, said yesterday.

Speaking before he flew out of Australia, Mr Margulies said Mr Habib was suffering emotional and psychological problems as a result of his incarceration, and would require specialist treatment.

Held for more than three years on suspicion he had prior knowledge of the September 11 attacks, Mr Habib flew back to Australia on Friday after US authorities admitted they did not have the evidence to charge him.


Killer elephant 'acquitted'http://www.smh.com.au/news/Unusual-Tales/Killer-elephant-acquitted/2005/01/30/1107020254554.html

"Pepsi, a six-year-old performing elephant that killed a man who teased it with a piece of sugarcane has been "acquitted" of any crime and will not be put to death, Malaysian police said.

The sweet-toothed jumbo, part of a five-elephant show troupe from Thailand performing at a Buddhist temple in Malaysia's northern Kedah state, gored and trampled a 50-year-old rubber-tapper after he tormented it during a break in the show on Friday.

Police deputy superintendent Mohd Sukri Awang said police had decided no criminal action was involved, and the wildlife department said no action would be taken against the elephant, The Star newspaper reported."


Peter Pan gets his day in courthttp://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Peter-Pan-gets-his-day-in-court/2005/01/30/1107020259397.html

"The trial of the pop singer Michael Jackson on charges of child molestation is due to start in California today and, given the circumstances, many people assume it will be a slam dunk for the prosecution.

Can there really be anyone on the jury unaware this is not the first time the singer has been accused of child molestation?

In 1993 a 13-year-old boy, Jordan Chandler, told police Jackson sexually abused him at his Neverland ranch.

The singer strenuously denied those charges but paid the boy's family about $US20 million to make the case go away. Jackson says he paid up to avoid the trauma of a trial. But now another 13-year-old boy has accused the singer of plying him with alcohol and fondling his genitals."
 
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Frigid

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Locking up 9-year-old thief no answer: Carrhttp://smh.com.au/news/National/Loc...-no-answer-Carr/2005/01/31/1107020311844.html

"Charging children under 10 with criminal offences or locking them up is not the answer, says Premier Bob Carr.

Police today confirmed a nine-year-old boy was one of two minors arrested during an operation targeting car theft in Sydney's west.

The boy, along with a 15-year-old, were spoken to by police but released without charge during the four-day Operation Spicer in Glebe."
 

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Give jury a say in sentence: top judge

"NSW's most senior judge has called for jurors to become involved in sentencing for serious crime, saying it would improve decision making and public confidence in the judiciary.

The Chief Justice, James Spigelman, last night told a dinner to mark the opening of the law year that judges could sit down with juries and correct any "fundamental defects.

...

The Chief Justice's speech drew a sharp reaction from the head of the criminal law committee of the NSW Law Society, Pauline Wright, who said it could lead to "mob sentencing".

"I am so opposed to it. It would be a really big mistake," Ms Wright said."

related: the UNSW Law Society dinner address by Spigelman CJhttp://www.smh.com.au/articles/2005/01/31/1107020322129.html


Defend unborn's rights, Pope tells Catholic lawyershttp://www.smh.com.au/news/National...atholic-lawyers/2005/01/31/1107020329722.html

"In a rare personal message, the Pope has appealed to Australia's Catholic lawyers to defend the rights of the unborn and aged.

Conferring his blessing on the St Thomas More Society, the Catholic lawyers' association, the Pope John Paul II urged its members to defend the "inviolable dignity and rights of every human being - from conception until natural death"."


Power and pain in old Sydneyhttp://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Power-and-pain-in-old-Sydney/2005/01/31/1107020329087.html

"The daily business of Sydney's courts provided a ready source of human drama and gossip for the colony's newspapers. They could be insulting and contemptuous, but judges put a high value on the freedom of the press in the fledgling days of democracy.

The governor was the absolute authority in Sydney - its media and the Supreme Court were the only institutions that threatened his dominance.

In the 1820s, the first chief justice, Francis Forbes, had some famous run-ins with Governor Ralph Darling.

...

In Jane New's case, Darling revoked an assignment - originally made by the governor of Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) - of a woman to her husband and sent her to the female factory (women's prison) at Parramatta. He argued he had the right to do so, despite her conviction for stealing being overturned.

New's husband brought her case before the Supreme Court on a habeas corpus action which challenged the power of the governor to detain her.

Forbes effectively decided the case on a technicality, saying Darling had no power to intervene in an assignment made by another governor.

...

In addition to trying to impeach Darling, Wentworth also proved a thorn in the governor's side on money matters. One case involving tobacco tax emphasises how important the courts were in asserting the rule of law in the face of government excesses.

On August 22, 1828, a ship carrying a huge consignment of tobacco arrived in the colony. On October 16, a law was passed which doubled the duty from one shilling - the amount which had applied since 1825.

Wentworth argued that the power of the governor to impose a duty "is a mere naked power and must be strictly pursued".

"It is clear he has no power to impose a retrospective duty or a retrospective law," he said.
 
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omg_a

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31/1/05 SMH. I was going to link but you would have to register with smh.

Nation's guardian of liberty turns his back

The Attorney-General is determinedly ignoring his duty to the law, write Ian Barker and Robert Toner.

As the Commonwealth Attorney-General is the first law officer of the Commonwealth, one of his traditional duties is to resist abuse of liberties bestowed by law.

It is difficult indeed to see a single decision made by the Attorney-General, Philip Ruddock, that would suggest he has much interest in resisting abuses of liberty either here or overseas. In the creation of Australian statutes he constantly attempts to confer the maximum investigative and coercive powers upon anonymous agents of secret government organisations, and to put those powers beyond reach of any judicial interference. In the process of this repressive legislation, the Government takes from every member of the community a right, corresponding to each power bestowed.

Along with the rest of the Government, Ruddock has long displayed indifference to the treatment of the two Australian prisoners who were in American hands. He has long maintained that he had no concern about the incarceration of Mamdouh Habib, now released, and David Hicks by a foreign power, unprotected by judicial scrutiny, in defiance of the Geneva Conventions, and beyond the reach of habeas corpus. He has no complaint about Hicks's proposed trial by military commission and sees no potential for unfairness in the procedure. He sees nothing wrong with rule by presidential decree, in defiance of the US Congress and its statutes.

We do not know what Ruddock's view is of the US judicial decisions that have turned all this on its head. Presumably he was disappointed at the emergence of some appearance of the rule of law.

Habib was arrested in Pakistan, not in the Afghanistan war zone. The Americans can offer no proof he was any sort of enemy combatant. He could have been sent straight to Guantanamo Bay, but was sent firstly to Egypt, for interrogation by Egyptian methods. It is reasonable to infer that our Government knew of this when it happened, but it has made no complaint then or since.

Whenever allegations are publicly made about abuses by the US military of those held at Guantanamo Bay, in particular of Hicks and Habib, Ruddock's response is to say that he accepts the American assurance that all is well and allegations of torture are suspect. Since September 11, 2001 the governments of Australia and the US have collaborated very closely in the so-called war against terrorism, part of which resulted in the imprisonment without trial of Hicks and Habib. On November 13, 2001 the US President, George Bush, made a military order for the "detention, treatment and trial of certain non-citizens in the war against terrorism". The order was followed by the secret publication on March 6, 2003 of the report of a Pentagon working group of lawyers called "Working Group Report on Detainee Interrogations in the Global War on Terrorism". The principal author of the document is about to become the US Attorney-General. The document purports to be a justification of interrogation by torture by the authority of presidential decree. It is legal nonsense, and deeply offensive nonsense at that, apparently now disowned even by the President.

But given the status of Habib and Hicks, it is not unreasonable to assume the Australian Government knew of this document when it was created. If it did not know of it then, it knows of it now, but we have yet to hear a word of concern from the Attorney-General that Australian citizens might have been interrogated by torture, perhaps pursuant to the legal justifications offered to the president in the working paper.

In 2004, American methods of interrogation became public when the awful Abu Ghraib photographs were published. But, we were told, no one in senior office knew about such goings-on, neither here nor the US. But Australia did know about it. In spite of Senator Robert Hill's obfuscation, a Senate inquiry got half way to the truth, after publication of a letter of December 24, 2003, drafted by the Australian military lawyer Major George O'Kane, to the International Red Cross.

We now know that the Red Cross expressed deep concern to coalition forces about the treatment of prisoners, after a visit to Abu Ghraib in October 2003. It seems that O'Kane drafted the response from the coalition. The letter blandly brushed off the Red Cross's concerns. It asserted that every effort was made to uphold the Geneva Conventions, but talked about different rules for "high value detainees". The letter was nonsense, but must have been known to the Australian Government. It is little wonder the Government kept O'Kane away from the Senate inquiry.

The release of Habib seems to have thrown the Australian Government into a tailspin; being released without charge should be a matter of the greatest embarrassment to Ruddock, yet we cannot detect even a blush. The Attorney-General has said several times that, on his return, Habib was to be singled out for special treatment. He will not have a passport, he will be kept under surveillance, and his freedom to speak to the press may be inhibited. Is this Australia? Usually one would expect the Attorney-General to give some recognition to the presumption of innocence. In the meantime, Ruddock continues to support a military commission trial for Hicks.

Nothing suggests that our Attorney-General has the slightest problem with events at Guantanamo Bay or Abu Ghraib. It all sits uneasily with traditional concepts of his high office.

Ian Barker, QC and Robert Toner, SC are Sydney barristers.
 

Frigid

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haha i think it has been well established that the role of the attorney-general is that of a politician first, a judicial officer second. :p

nice article :)
 

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Lawyers uneasy over plan for jury sentencing role
"A radical proposal to involve jurors in the sentencing of serious crime will be examined by the NSW Law Reform Commission.

While the State Government and victims of crime groups yesterday described the plan - put forward by the state's most senior judge - as "a good idea", the legal profession expressed serious doubts.

The Chief Justice, James Spigelman, told a NSW Law Society dinner on Monday that an in-camera consultation process could improve decision making and public confidence in the court system."


Hicks has rights, rules US judgehttp://www.smh.com.au/news/Global-T...-rules-US-judge/2005/02/01/1107228701903.html
"A US court decision that declared the Guantanamo Bay military commissions unconstitutional, and said the prisoners had rights under the US constitution to challenge their detention, has intensified calls for the Australian Government to demand David Hicks get a fair trial or be brought home.

The decision, by Judge Joyce Hens Green of the Federal District Court in Washington, came days after the other Australian being held at Guantanamo Bay, Mamdouh Habib, was released by the US without charge and returned to Australia."


Ex-magistrate collapses attempting to clear namehttp://www.smh.com.au/news/National...g-to-clear-name/2005/02/01/1107228700193.html
"[Former Chief Magistrate of Queensland] Fingleton was convicted in June 2002 on a charge of retaliating against a witness after threatening to demote a magistrate, Basil Gribbin.

She was sentenced to a year in jail in 2002 but that was reduced to six months on appeal.

Mr Gribbin had written an affidavit to a judicial committee in support of a Brisbane magistrate, Anne Thacker, who was fighting a decision by Fingleton to have her transferred.

Fingleton then wrote an email to Mr Gribbin asking him to show cause why he should keep his job.

The former chief magistrate broke down after Justice Michael McHugh told the Queensland Director of Public Prosecutions, David Jackson, that he was presenting a weak case in defending his decision to convict Fingleton.

Justice McHugh questioned how any jury could find her guilty. "I really am puzzled by this case," he said.

"I would have thought it was as clear as it could have been [that] she lost his [Mr Gribbin's] confidence and she wanted to let him go.

"I don't see how anybody could come to the conclusion that wasn't the reason she did it. It strikes me as a fairly weak case."

Justice McHugh also criticised the summing up of Fingleton's case when it was heard in Queensland.

"In a major criminal trial I have never seen summing up like this before," he said."The jury got no assistance. Is this a standard model of summing up in Queensland?"

Justice Kirby questioned Mr Jackson along similar lines, saying there must be a point when a chief magistrate had the power to conclude she had lost confidence in someone she appointed."

related:
[Opinion Article] Swimming upstream and against spitehttp://www.smh.com.au/news/Alan-Ram...d-against-spite/2005/02/01/1107228696285.html
"Diane Fingleton came to Canberra yesterday. You might remember her as the former Queensland chief magistrate jailed 21 months ago for the absurd "sin" of supposedly having "bullied" one of the men magistrates under her authority. It could only happen in Queensland.

But happen it did, and the former typist on Bill Hayden's ministerial staff in the Whitlam government 30 years ago, who later waitressed at night for four years so she could study for her law degree by day, ended up spending almost seven months in the slammer and can never practise law again.

I wrote in July 2003 about Fingleton and the cowardice of the Queensland Beattie Labor Government, which appointed her but did not lift a finger to save her when the "old boys' club" of the Queensland magistracy closed ranks...

How could this happen? Because in the latter part of 2002 she had emailed a senior colleague she thought "disloyal" and "disruptive" in supporting another magistrate who did not want to be posted by Fingleton to Mount Isa, in the state's far north-west.

It did not help that the colleague, a man, has always thought Fingleton's appointment, by the Beattie Government, as Queensland's first woman chief magistrate in July 1999, an "appalling" choice. He used her email to accuse her of "threatening behaviour". This translated, eventually, into "retaliation against a witness", a charge put into law to deal with organised crime."
 
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mr EaZy

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hey frigid!
im reading the uts guide to essay writing :) and it says that its a good idea to once in a while read pieces of judgements laid down by judges.

do u agree with that?
and is that the reason why you have put up this thread?
 

Frigid

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mr EaZy said:
says that its a good idea to once in a while read pieces of judgements laid down by judges.
well i assume so, since you would need to in case-noting and precedent exercises :)

and dear, it's judgment.
and is that the reason why you have put up this thread?
reason i put up with this thread was to give everyone some topics to think about... some items are strongly related to the foundation course, such as the one about Chief Justice Francis Forbes and history...


also, everyone should read their Lawyer's Weekly every once in a while. :)

i think i'll stop updating this thread, once you guys get settled in - you can do your own research :p
 

santaslayer

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Frigid said:
i think i'll stop updating this thread, once you guys get settled in - you can do your own research :p

No, keep on going, don't stop. You're doing well.
Researching is hard and tedious. :p
 

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