Rochell v. City of Springdale Police Department et al
Filing
116
MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER granting 100 Motion for Reconsideration. The false imprisonment claim is Dismissed With Prejudice. Signed by Honorable Timothy L. Brooks on February 25, 2021. (src)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS
FAYETTEVILLE DIVISION
JOHNNIE ROCHELL, JR.
V.
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 5:16-CV-5093
DETECTIVE CODY ROSS
DEFENDANT
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Currently before the Court is Defendant Detective Cody Ross’s second Motion for
Reconsideration (Doc. 100) and Brief in Support (Doc. 101) concerning the Court’s
decision to deny his request for summary judgment on Plaintiff Johnnie Rochell, Jr.’s
false-imprisonment claim. The Motion is GRANTED, and the false-imprisonment claim
is dismissed with prejudice.
I. BACKGROUND
On October 25, 2017, the Court issued an order (Doc. 69) denying Detective
Ross’s request for summary judgment as to Mr. Rochell’s claims for false imprisonment
and excessive force. On November 21, 2017, Detective Ross filed his first motion for
reconsideration of the Court’s order—but only with respect to the false-imprisonment
claim. (Docs. 76 & 77). On November 22, he appealed the Court’s summary judgment
order to the Eighth Circuit. (Doc. 79). In the meantime, this Court considered his first
motion for reconsideration and denied it on December 1, 2017. (Doc. 82). It appears
Detective Ross intended to appeal all issues in the Court’s summary judgment order,
including the false-imprisonment claim; however, he failed to properly file an amended
notice of appeal after his first motion for reconsideration was denied. As a result, the
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Court of Appeals determined that the false-imprisonment claim was “not properly before
[the Court]” and did not consider it. (Doc. 83-1, pp. 3–4). The excessive-force claim on
the other hand was substantively reviewed by the Eighth Circuit, and this Court’s decision
to preserve that claim for trial was affirmed.
After the Eighth Circuit issued its mandate on the interlocutory appeal, Detective
Ross filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the United States Supreme Court (Doc. 93),
which was ultimately denied. (Doc. 94). The matter finally returned to this Court and
was set for trial. After that, Detective Ross filed the instant Motion for Reconsideration.
The Motion asks, once again, that the Court reconsider its decision to preserve the falseimprisonment claim for trial. Detective Ross’s arguments now reflect Judge Steven M.
Colloton’s concurring opinion in the interlocutory appeal.
See Doc. 83-1, pp. 4–6.
Judge Colloton had agreed with the majority that Detective Ross was appropriately
denied qualified immunity on the excessive-force claim; however, he went on to suggest
in dicta that perhaps this Court had erred in preserving the false-imprisonment claim for
trial, even though that claim had not been properly appealed and thus was not before the
appellate court for review. His observations as to the false-imprisonment claim were as
follows:
The district court also denied Ross qualified immunity on Rochell’s Fourth
Amendment claim for false imprisonment, but Ross did not appeal that
issue, and this court therefore does not resolve it. Because Ross’s stated
reason for arresting Rochell was his alleged unlawful possession of a
firearm, the district court seemed to believe that Ross could not rely on
Rochell’s undisputed commission of a disorderly conduct offense to justify
arresting and detaining him. R. Doc. 69, at 21–22. Under the Fourth
Amendment . . . “an arresting officer’s state of mind (except for the facts that
he knows) is irrelevant to the existence of probable cause.” Devenpeck v.
Alford, 543 U.S. 146, 153 (2004); see Carpenter v. Gage, 686 F.3d 644,
2
649 (8th Cir. 2012) (“That the deputies’ subjective reason for arresting
Carpenter may have been different does not invalidate the arrest.”). This
proposition maybe considered further as the case proceeds.
Id. at pp. 5–6.
The Court has not previously considered the holding of Devenpeck v. Alford in
either its summary judgment order or in its order denying Detective Ross’s first motion for
reconsideration. But now that these legal arguments have been formally presented to
the Court in the form of a second motion for reconsideration, the time is ripe to address
these issues head on. As this Opinion will explain, the Court believes that the rule
articulated in Devenpeck lacks nuance and that its strict application results in a
miscarriage of justice in the case at bar; nevertheless, the Court finds itself constrained
to apply Devenpeck, in combination with the holding in Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 47,
486–87 (1994), to conclude that Mr. Rochell’s false-imprisonment claim must be
dismissed.
II.
LEGAL STANDARD
A motion for reconsideration under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(6)
provides that a party may be relieved from an order of the Court for “any . . . reason that
justifies relief.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(1) & (6). Further, “[w]hen a district court is convinced
that it incorrectly decided a legal question in an interlocutory ruling, the district court may
correct the decision to avoid later reversal.” Lovett v. Gen. Motors Corp., 975 F.2d 518,
522 (8th Cir. 1992). When reconsideration of an order on summary judgment is at issue,
the Court must analyze whether “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and
the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). All facts
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on summary judgment must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-movant, who
must be given the benefit of any inferences that logically can be drawn from those facts.
Canada v. Union Elec. Co., 135 F.3d 1211, 1212–13 (8th Cir. 1998).
III.
DISCUSSION
There is no dispute of fact that at the time Detective Ross arrested Mr. Rochell,
and later, when he ordered that Mr. Rochell be transported to the Washington County
Detention Center (“WCDC”) for incarceration, Detective Ross claimed to be under the
mistaken belief that Mr. Rochell was a felon in illegal possession of a firearm. That was
the sole reason Mr. Rochell was arrested, and that was the sole reason he was
imprisoned. Detective Ross’s deposition testimony confirms this. See Doc. 53-7, pp.
10–11.
When the Court previously analyzed the facts of this case on summary
judgment, there was a genuine, material dispute as to whether Detective Ross possessed
arguable probable cause to arrest and incarcerate Mr. Rochell. Mr. Rochell’s arrest was
based on false information about his felony record, which a police dispatcher had relayed
to officers who were present at the scene, including Detective Ross. It turned out that
this dispatcher had confused Mr. Rochell’s criminal history for that of another person who
did, in fact, have a felony record.
With that said, Detective Ross was entitled to
reasonably rely on the information the dispatcher passed on to him at the time of arrest,
so he was entitled to qualified immunity for the claim of false arrest. See Doc. 69, pp.
21–23.
He was not, however, entitled to qualified immunity for his subsequent
decision—made some time after arriving at the police station and reviewing Mr. Rochell’s
Arkansas criminal history (“ACIC”) report—that Mr. Rochell be held in jail for being a felon
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in possession.
As the Court explained in its prior order:
The facts are undisputed that when Detective Ross arrived at the police
station, he obtained a copy of the ACIC report that contained the false
information about Mr. Rochell’s criminal history, which, in turn, formed the
sole basis for arresting Mr. Rochell for being a felon in possession. At what
point was it incumbent upon Detective Ross to carefully examine the ACIC
report and make certain that the report was correct and contained a true
record of Mr. Rochell’s prior felony? The law does not answer that
question with certainty, but all parties here agree that Mr. Rochell disputed
that he had a felony conviction from the time Detective Ross first informed
him of it, and Mr. Rochell continued to dispute it after he arrived at the police
station—so much so that Mr. Rochell’s protests caused Detective Ross to
question whether the evidence against him was correct. Detective Ross
testified that at the police station, Mr. Rochell was “very adamant” that the
ACIC report was false when Detective Ross showed it to him. (Doc. 53-7,
p. 12). And “the way” in which Mr. Rochell was denying the felony
convictions—forcefully, yet “respectful[ly],” made Detective Ross feel “there
may have been some validity to [Mr. Rochell’s denials].” Id.
Even though Detective Ross harbored doubts as to Mr. Rochell’s guilt—and
by extension, the accuracy of the ACIC report that was the source of
information confirming his guilt—Detective Ross conducted no further
investigation to verify his suspicions. Even a cursory inspection of the ACIC
report that Detective Ross held in his hands would have revealed the felony
criminal history that was listed there belonged to a White man named
Johnny Wayne Russell, Jr.; whereas Detective Ross had in his custody a
Black man named Johnnie Rochell, Jr. Exigent circumstances do not
explain Detective Ross’s failure to take a second glance at the top of the
first page of the ACIC report and question the validity of the “false hit” on
Johnny Russell prior to approving Mr. Rochell’s transport to the WCDC.
(Doc. 69, pp. 23–24 (footnote omitted; emphasis in original)).
The ACIC report (Doc. 54-2) contained information that was exculpatory of the
crime that Mr. Rochell had been accused of committing, and Detective Ross was in
physical possession of that evidence at the time he ordered Mr. Rochell to jail. Under
those facts, the Court concluded that
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[a] reasonable jury could find that even though Detective Ross questioned
Mr. Rochell’s guilt at the police station, he did not behave reasonably in
failing to conduct any investigation—either due to his lack of research skills,
his lack of training in reading ACIC reports, and/or his eagerness to return
to the field and complete the surveillance mission that Mr. Rochell’s arrest
had interrupted.
Id. at p. 26.
Mr. Rochell’s arrest and imprisonment happened on a Friday. Over the weekend,
Detective Ross suffered what can fairly be described as an attack of conscience. He
testified in his deposition that on Monday morning, he returned to the police station and
told a fellow officer that he “ha[d] some concerns about [Mr. Rochell’s arrest].” (Doc. 537, p. 14). He said, “I think that this guy may have a point and there’s an identity issue
somewhere in here . . . When you run him, he shows to be a convicted felon but he is
adamant that he’s not and I just want to make sure we did the right thing.” Id.
In his quest to do “the right thing,” Detective Ross spent part of the day Monday
double-checking Mr. Rochell’s criminal history. Ultimately, Detective Ross was able to
confirm that he had overlooked critical information in Mr. Rochell’s ACIC report: He had
no felony record and, therefore, had been lawfully in the possession of his firearm
throughout the entire encounter with law enforcement on Friday. It is fully apparent that
Detective Ross felt badly about the mistakes he had made in Mr. Rochell’s case, as he
decided to call him personally to apologize. The call, which was recorded, was placed
to Mr. Rochell at his home, since by that time he had mustered the hundreds of dollars
necessary to post a bond. During the call, Detective Ross first reassured Mr. Rochell
that the Washington County prosecutor had been contacted and the “charges [for felon
in possession] ha[d] been dropped.” (Doc. 53-17, Audio of Telephone Call). Next,
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Detective Ross acknowledged that Mr. Rochell had been right all along about his
innocence. Detective Ross admitted his error outright, telling Mr. Rochell, “You were
correct—I do apologize.” Id. He ended the call by promising Mr. Rochell that he “no
longer ha[d] a pending court date” and could return to the police station to retrieve his
firearm at his convenience. Id. He said:
I’m willing to do whatever I can to make this right because I know that you
were certainly inconvenienced—to say the least . . . . On a personal note, I
hope you know it is not personal, man. I wasn’t . . . wasn’t . . . trying to
personally attack you or anything like that, but I had to go off what I knew at
the time and that was that you were . . . you showed to be a convicted felon,
and it’s obviously not you.
Id.
Shortly after this phone call ended, the parties agree that Mr. Rochell came to the
police station to meet Detective Ross and retrieve his firearm. Though we are not privy
to what was said during the meeting, Detective Ross recalls that on “the same day,” he
and his supervisor “broke out a[n] Arkansas criminal code book” to find another crime Mr.
Rochell might be charged with, based on the events that took place the previous Friday,
prior to the arrest. (Doc. 53-7, p. 20). The detectives settled on the crime of disorderly
conduct, a misdemeanor. Id. They then contacted the city prosecutor and explained
what they wanted to do, and the prosecutor approved the issuance of a citation. Id.
Detective Ross served the citation for disorderly conduct (Doc. 53-18) on Mr. Rochell on
Friday, February 26, 2016, an entire week after the original arrest.
Mr. Rochell pleaded not guilty to the charge of disorderly conduct, and the matter
was set for a bench trial before the District Court of the City of Springdale, Arkansas. Mr.
Rochell represented himself pro se, and the Court assumes that it was his word against
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Detective Ross’s during the trial. Although Mr. Rochell was likely indigent at the time, 1 he
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was not entitled to the appointment of counsel under Arkansas Rule of Criminal
Procedure 8.2(a) because a state court “need not appoint counsel if the indigent
defendant is charged with a misdemeanor and the court has determined that under no
circumstances will incarceration be imposed as a part of any punishment.” In the end,
Mr. Rochell was convicted of disorderly conduct and ordered to pay a fine and court costs
totaling $390.00. (Doc. 53-19). The Court is confident that Mr. Rochell had no idea then
that a contrived misdemeanor charge and uncounseled conviction by a municipal judge
could later bar his Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial for his Fourth Amendment claim
of false imprisonment.
There is no formal record of proceedings before the Springdale District Court, so
we do not know what Detective Ross told the municipal judge. But we do have Detective
Ross’s sworn testimony in this case, and the testimony here does not come remotely
close to supporting a conviction against Mr. Rochell for disorderly conduct. According to
Arkansas Code § 5-71-207(a):
A person commits the offense of disorderly conduct if, with the purpose to
cause public inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm or recklessly creating a
risk of public inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm, he or she:
(1) Engages in fighting or in violent, threatening, or tumultuous
behavior;
(2) Makes unreasonable or excessive noise;
(3) In a public place, uses abusive or obscene language, or makes
an obscene gesture, in a manner likely to provoke a violent or
disorderly response;
He qualified for in forma pauperis status in this Court on May 6, 2016, approximately
one month after the bench trial in question. See Doc. 7.
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(4) Disrupts or disturbs any lawful assembly or meeting of persons;
(5) Obstructs vehicular or pedestrian traffic;
(6) Congregates with two (2) or more other persons in a public place
and to comply with a lawful order to disperse of a law enforcement
officer or other person engaged in enforcing or executing the law;
(7) Creates a hazardous or physically offensive condition;
(8) In a public place, mars, defiles, desecrates, or otherwise
damages a patriotic or religious symbol that is an object of respect
by the public or a substantial segment of the public; or
(9) In a public place, exposes his or her private parts.
Of the nine possible ways to prove disorderly conduct, it appears the one that could
potentially be used in a proceeding against Mr. Rochell is found in subsection 7.
According to that subsection, the state would have to show beyond a reasonable doubt
that Mr. Rochell “recklessly creat[ed] a risk of public inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm”
by “[c]reat[ing] a hazardous or physically offensive condition” “with the purpose to cause
public inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm.” Id.
The parties do not dispute that just prior to Mr. Rochell’s arrest, Detective Ross
had been sitting in an unmarked truck, parked “against the curb” in front of Mr. Rochell’s
lawn. (Doc. 53-7, p. 3). Mr. Rochell’s neighborhood was one in which illegal drug
activity took place. 2 Over the next several minutes, Mr. Rochell tried at least twice to get
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the driver’s attention and inquire what he was doing there. Id. at pp. 3–4. According to
In fact, Detective Ross was in the neighborhood on a stakeout along with members of
the Drug Enforcement Agency’s Task Force. (Doc. 53-7, p. 2). The officers were there
to arrest a female suspected of engaging in illegal drug activity. She was believed to
have been visiting a house located near Mr. Rochell’s. Id.
2
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Detective Ross, “he was kind of leaning over and waving at me with his arm, kind of just
waving up and down.” Id. Mr. Rochell watched Detective Ross’s undercover truck from
his front porch “for probably a few minutes,” id. at p. 3; Mr. Rochell then waved and tried
to get the driver to roll down his window, id. at p. 4; when Detective Ross did not respond,
Mr. Rochell went inside his house for “about five minutes,” id.; he then came back outside
and “started waving again,” id.
Instead of speaking to Mr. Rochell, Detective Ross
stayed in his truck and continued talking on his cell phone to other officers while looking
through his binoculars. Id. He testified that Mr. Rochell could not have known at the
time that he was a police officer on a stakeout: “We understand we’re in unmarked cars.
We don’t look like police officers and people get pretty curious as to what we’re doing.”
Id.
The facts are undisputed that after trying but failing to find out what the driver of
this truck was doing parked in front of his house, talking on a cell phone, and surveilling
something (or someone) through a pair of binoculars, Mr. Rochell went back into his
house and retrieved his AR-15 firearm, which was attached to a strap. He placed the
strap over his head so that the firearm rested on his back. Mr. Rochell then exited his
front door and walked across his front lawn, coming to a stop about “eight to twelve feet”
from the suspicious person parked in front of his house. Id. at pp. 5–6. Mr. Rochell stood
there and waited until Detective Ross saw him. The following facts are true, as confirmed
by Detective Ross in his deposition:
•
Mr. Rochell’s hands did not touch the weapon, and at no point did he
point the weapon at anyone. Id. at p. 23.
•
The barrel of the weapon was pointed towards the ground, and it
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rested on Mr. Rochell’s back. Id. at p. 22.
•
Mr. Rochell made no threatening gestures. Id.
•
When Detective Ross saw Mr. Rochell standing on his lawn with the
weapon strapped to his back, Detective Ross exited his vehicle,
pointed his service revolver at him, and told him to drop the weapon.
Id. at p. 7.
•
Though initially Mr. Rochell “kind of froze and stood there,” id. at p.
8, he removed the strap “very slowly” from his body and laid the
weapon near a tree, id. at p. 27.
•
Mr. Rochell never made any aggressive movements. Id. at p. 27.
•
He did not resist being forced to the ground. Id. at p. 28.
•
Once Mr. Rochell was on the ground, Detective Ross “very likely”
placed the barrel of his pistol against Mr. Rochell’s head. Id. at p. 30.
•
Detective Ross does not deny that he might have said to Mr. Rochell,
“I’m going to blow your fucking head off.” Id.
•
Mr. Rochell was handcuffed without resistance. Id. at p. 9.
•
Mr. Rochell responded to Detective Ross’s questions. Id.
•
Mr. Rochell insisted that he did not have a felony record, and
according to Detective Ross, Mr. Rochell “was certainly very
adamant about it,” but “[h]e was being respectful.” Id. at p. 12.
The Court has no doubt that Detective Ross became alarmed when he first saw
Mr. Rochell standing on the lawn several feet away from him with a weapon strapped to
his back. But it is also true that Detective Ross’s subjective feeling of alarm does not, in
and of itself, establish that Mr. Rochell committed the crime of disorderly conduct.
Instead, the objective facts surrounding the takedown and arrest, as outlined above,
indicate that no crime was committed. Furthermore, the law is clear that Mr. Rochell did
nothing illegal by standing on his own front lawn with his weapon strapped to his person.
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See Ark. Code Ann. § 5-73-120(c) (“It is permissible to carry a weapon under this section
if at the time of the act of carrying the weapon: (1) The person is in his or her own dwelling
or place of business or on property in which he or she has a possessory or proprietary
interest.”).
As should be clear from the Court’s discussion above, it is difficult to fathom how
Mr. Rochell was convicted of disorderly conduct if Detective Ross testified as he did in
this Court. Regardless of the Court’s views, however, Mr. Rochell paid his fine and did
not seek a de novo appeal of his conviction in a court of record. According to the holding
in Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 47, 486–87 (1994), he is now barred from questioning the
validity of his state-court conviction in the context of bringing a § 1983 civil action for
damages. This conviction—which arose from the same set of facts that are the subject
of the false-imprisonment claim in this § 1983 case—forces the Court to conclude that
there was probable cause (in hindsight) to arrest Mr. Rochell, even though Detective
Ross’s stated reason for arrest––and subsequent imprisonment––was that Mr. Rochell
was suspected of being a felon in possession of a firearm. The Supreme Court’s holding
in Devenpeck v. Alford is that an arresting officer's state of mind is irrelevant to the
existence of probable cause.
543 U.S. 146, 153 (2004).
Devenpeck has been
interpreted by courts to stand for the proposition that as long as probable cause exists to
arrest an individual for any crime, the arresting officer’s stated reason for making the
arrest is irrelevant. “If an officer has probable cause to believe that an individual has
committed even a very minor criminal offense in his presence, he may, without violating
the Fourth Amendment, arrest the offender.” Atwater v. City of Lago Vista, 532 U.S. 318,
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354 (2001). This is because “the probable cause inquiry is not necessarily based upon
the offense actually invoked by the arresting officer but upon whether the facts known at
the time of the arrest objectively provided probable cause to arrest.” United States v.
Jones, 432 F.3d 34, 41 (1st Cir. 2005) (citing Devenpeck).
The offense of disorderly conduct is classified as a Class C misdemeanor and
carries with it a possible punishment of up to 30 days in jail. Ark. Code Ann. § 5-4401(a)(3). It follows, therefore, that if there were probable cause to send Mr. Rochell to
jail on the night of the arrest due to disorderly conduct, his claim of false imprisonment
would lack validity and merit dismissal as a matter of law. The Court hesitates, however,
to simply dismiss this claim without commenting on the injustice of this result.
Mr.
Rochell will be deprived of his Seventh Amendment right to present to a jury of his peers
the facts which he believes show he was falsely imprisoned in violation of his Fourth
Amendment rights for being a felon in possession. Detective Ross’s own deposition
testimony coupled with his phone call of apology to Mr. Rochell indicate that Detective
Ross was well aware he had made grievous errors in Mr. Rochell’s case—errors that
could subject him to a civil lawsuit for constitutional rights violations. Bringing a facesaving misdemeanor citation against Mr. Rochell a week after the arrest was a gamble
that paid off. Mr. Rochell was indigent at the time, and when Detective Ross served him
with the disorderly conduct citation five days after dropping the felon-in-possession
charge, it was more likely than not that Mr. Rochell would have decided to represent
himself rather than hire counsel. The misdemeanor conviction effectively immunized
Detective Ross from potential prosecution for a Fourth Amendment violation by Mr.
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Rochell. This is because the conviction retroactively manufactured probable cause to
both arrest and imprison Mr. Rochell.
Though the underlying rationale behind the Devenpeck “any crime” rule is
essentially sound, its application in this case is troubling.
The Court agrees that,
generally speaking, a police officer should possess the latitude to arrest a suspect for
committing one crime, but later determine that he should be charged with a different
crime—provided there was probable cause to arrest him for the crime charged.
However, it is not difficult to imagine the Devenpeck rule being misused by law
enforcement to immunize unlawful conduct, particularly when the arresting officer faces
possible civil penalties for violating an indigent suspect’s Fourth Amendment rights. This
appears to be what has happened here. For that reason, principles of equity and justice
would be best served if district and appellate courts alike engaged in a critical evaluation
of the Devenpeck rule. As for Mr. Rochell’s particular case, however, the Court believes
its hands are tied, and his false-imprisonment claim must be dismissed with prejudice on
summary judgment.
IV.
CONCLUSION
IT IS ORDERED that Defendant Detective Cody Ross’s second Motion for
Reconsideration (Doc. 100) is GRANTED. The claim for false imprisonment is
DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. This leaves only the excessive force claim for trial.
IT IS SO ORDERED on this 25th day of February, 2021.
TIMOTHY L. BROOKS
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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