Southern California Institute of Law v. TCS Education System et al

Filing 67

STIPULATION for Protective Order filed by plaintiff Southern California Institute of Law. (Attachments: # 1 Proposed Order)(Shohet, George)

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1 2 3 4 5 George A. Shohet SBN 112697 LAW OFFICES OF GEORGE A. SHOHET, A PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION 245 Main Street, Suite 310 Venice, CA 90291-5216 Tel.: (310) 452-3176 Fax: (310) 452-2270 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Gretchen M. Nelson SBN 112566 KREINDLER & KREINDLER LLP 707 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 4100 Los Angeles, CA 90017 Tel.: (213) 622-6469 Fax: (213) 622-6019 Attorneys for Plaintiff Southern California Institute of Law 14 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 15 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 16 17 18 19 20 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF LAW, a California corporation, Plaintiff, vs. 22 TCS EDUCATION SYSTEM, an Illinois corporation; DAVID J. FIGULI, an individual; and GLOBAL EQUITIES, LLC d/b/a HIGHER EDUCATION GROUP, a Colorado limited liability company, 24 25 26 27 [Assigned to Hon. John A. Kronstadt] STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 21 23 CASE NO.: CV10-8026 JAK (AJWx) Action Filed: Oct. 25, 2010 Defendants. 28 ______________________________________________________________________________ STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 WHEREAS all parties to this action desire that a Protective Order be entered 2 in this action pursuant to Rule 26(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to limit 3 the use of their confidential, proprietary, business, financial, technical, engineering 4 and other private information; 5 NOW THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY STIPULATED by and among plaintiff 6 Southern California Institute of Law ("Plaintiff") and defendants TCS Education 7 System, David J. Figuli and Global Equities, LLC (collectively, "Defendants"), 8 through their respective counsel of record and subject to the approval of the Court, 9 and without waiving any claims or defenses that they may have in this action, that 10 the following Stipulated Protective Order may be entered in this action to govern the 11 use of information contained in the parties’ responses to discovery. 12 1. 13 RECITALS OF GOOD CAUSE 1.1 Preparation and trial of this action may require the discovery of certain 14 business records and other materials that contain trade secrets or confidential 15 information including, but not limited to, tax and financial information, strategic 16 planning documents, personnel information, self-evaluation materials, confidential 17 regulatory submissions and other competitively sensitive and proprietary 18 information. 19 20 21 1.2. Public dissemination of trade secrets or the parties' confidential or proprietary information may harm the parties and their respective businesses. 1.3 Disclosure of confidential information to persons designated in this 22 Stipulated Protective Order may be necessary to enable the parties to fairly prepare 23 this case for trial and other proceedings. 24 25 26 27 28 ________________________________________________________________ 1 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 2. DEFINITIONS 2.1 Party: Any party to this action, including all of its officers, directors, trustees, employees, consultants, retained experts, outside counsel (and their support staff), members, parents, subsidiaries and affiliates. 2.2 Discovery Material: All items or information, regardless of the medium or manner generated, stored, or maintained (including, among other things, documents, electronically stored information, testimony, and tangible things), that are produced in this matter. 2.3 CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION: Information that is sensitive and/or proprietary and that warrants protection under this Order, specifically: (1) trade secrets as defined under California Civil Code Section 3426.1(d) and applicable case law; (2) other confidential and proprietary technical, engineering, research or development information; (3) personal or commercial financial, budgeting, cost, pricing, and/or accounting information; (4) information about existing and potential clients, faculty and students; (5) marketing and branding studies, performance and projections, business strategies, decisions and/or negotiations; (6) personnel compensation, evaluations and other employment information; (7) attorney-client or work product information; and (8) confidential and proprietary information about affiliates, parents, subsidiaries, and third parties with whom a Party has had business relationships. Confidential Information includes the Confidential Information itself, any information derived therefrom, and all copies, photographs, excerpts, and summaries thereof, as well as testimony and oral conversations derived therefrom or related thereto. Confidential Information does not include any information that is or becomes publicly available provided that this Order was not violated when the information was disclosed. 2.4 Producing Party: A Party that produces Discovery Material in this action. ________________________________________________________________ 2 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 2.5 Receiving Party: A Party that receives Discovery Material from a 2 Producing Party. 3 2.6 Designating Party: A Party that designates Discovery Material as 4 CONFIDENTIAL pursuant to this Order. 5 3. SCOPE OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 3.1 6 The protections of this Protective Order may be invoked with respect to 7 any Discovery Material produced or created in this action that contains 8 CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION of any Party or non-party witness, or that the 9 Producing Party is otherwise required or entitled by law to maintain in confidence, 10 and with respect to any deposition, court filing, correspondence, exhibits or 11 discovery request or response containing or referring to such materials. 12 Discovery Material may be designated CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION by any 13 Party or by any non-party producing materials in this action. The terms "Producing 14 Party" or "Designating Party" as used herein shall be deemed to include a non-party 15 that produces materials in this action. 3.2 16 Said This Protective Order does not in any way deprive any Party or non- 17 party of its right to contest another Party's claims to protection for confidential or 18 privileged information. A Party's decision not to contest another party's designation 19 of Discovery Material as "CONFIDENTIAL" is not to be construed as an admission 20 that such material is a trade secret or otherwise deserving of protection under this 21 Protective Order. No Party shall be deemed to be in violation of this Protective 22 Order with respect to disclosures of any Discovery Materials to any other persons 23 prior to the designation of that Discovery Material as "CONFIDENTIAL" pursuant 24 to this Protective Order. 25 4. LIMITATIONS ON USE OF DISCOVERY MATERIAL 26 Except as set forth herein, the Parties agree that all Discovery Material shall 27 be used solely for the purpose of prosecuting or defending this action or any other 28 ________________________________________________________________ 3 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 proceeding between the Parties and may not be used for any other purpose. The 2 Parties shall cooperate in maintaining the confidentiality of Discovery Material in 3 any other action or proceeding, including seeking entry of an order similar in scope 4 to this one. If the Parties cannot agree on a form of order, then any Party may apply 5 for one. 6 5. 7 DESIGNATION OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION 5.1 A Party may designate as CONFIDENTIAL any Discovery Material 8 which it reasonably believes contains CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION, and shall 9 do so in the following manner: (a) 10 Written discovery responses may be designated as 11 CONFIDENTIAL by marking the document CONFIDENTIAL in the caption 12 and in the header/footer appearing on each page, or by marking individual 13 responses within the document as CONFIDENTIAL. (b) 14 15 Hard copy documents may be designated as CONFIDENTIAL by marking each page containing Confidential Material as CONFIDENTIAL. (c) 16 Electronic, magnetic or optical media (such as diskettes, 17 CD-ROMs, tapes, or digital devices) may be designated as CONFIDENTIAL 18 by marking the outside of the device as CONFIDENTIAL or by affixing a 19 CONFIDENTIAL label to the device. The Receiving Party shall apply the 20 same marking to any printouts from any electronic, magnetic or optical media 21 designated as CONFIDENTIAL. 22 (d) 23 CONFIDENTIAL by making a statement to that effect on the record at the 24 deposition. The Court Reporter or other person recording the proceedings 25 shall segregate and separately bind any portion of the transcript which has 26 been designated as CONFIDENTIAL. In the alternative, the transcripts or 27 portions thereof may be designated as CONFIDENTIAL by written notice to Deposition transcripts, or any portions thereof, may be designated as 28 ________________________________________________________________ 4 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 counsel for the parties given within 20 days of the Designating Party’s receipt 2 of the transcript from the Court Reporter. 3 5.2 A Party that inadvertently fails to designate Discovery Material as 4 CONFIDENTIAL does not waive its right to designate that material as 5 CONFIDENTIAL. The Designating Party shall, upon discovery of the inadvertent 6 failure to designate, promptly notify in writing the Receiving Party and provide it 7 with substitute copies of the affected documents, marked as CONFIDENTIAL, at 8 the expense of the Designating Party. The Receiving Party shall retrieve and destroy 9 all copies of the undesignated materials, including copies previously provided to any 10 persons in addition to the Receiving Party itself. 11 6. 12 13 ACCESS TO CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION 6.1 No disclosure or dissemination of CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION shall be made to anyone other than the following: 14 (a) This Court and any other court, jury, arbitrator or tribunal that is 15 adjudicating claims between the Parties, including the staff of this Court 16 and any other court, arbitrator or tribunal; 17 (b) 18 during the taking of testimony and to the extent necessary to provide a 19 transcript or copy of the testimony taken; 20 (c) 21 necessary that the designated material be shown for purposes of the 22 litigation; 23 (d) 24 supervising and/or actively engaged in the preparation of the case and 25 their legal assistants and office personnel; 26 (e) 27 charged with the responsibility for supervising and/or actively engaged Court reporters and videographers, and members of their staff, Any Party, including any present employee thereof to whom it is Outside counsel for the Parties charged with the responsibility for In-house counsel for the Parties and any parent companies 28 ________________________________________________________________ 5 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 in the preparation of the case and their legal assistants and office 2 personnel; 3 (f) 4 trial or other proceeding, if such person is informed of the terms of this 5 Protective Order and provided with a copy of it. The witness shall be 6 bound by the terms of this Order whether or not he or she complies with 7 paragraph 6.2, below. 8 paragraph 6.2 shall not prevent the witness from being examined about 9 the CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION and/or Discovery Material; Any person called to testify as a witness either at a deposition, The failure of a witness to comply with 10 (g) 11 counsel of record) to provide services in connection with this litigation, 12 but only to the extent necessary for the expert or consultant to perform 13 his or her work in connection with this litigation; 14 (h) 15 a copy thereof was previously provided by the Designating Party, or 16 who received it in the ordinary course of business; 17 (i) 18 if such person was an author, source or recipient of the material; 19 (j) 20 by counsel to assist in the copying, imaging, handling or 21 computerization of documents containing the material; and 22 (k) 23 upon motion of either Party, or upon stipulation of all Parties in writing. 24 6.2 Outside experts or consultants retained by the Parties (or their Persons who authored the document or to whom the document or Former directors, officers, employees and consultants of a Party Employees of outside copying services or other vendors engaged Such other persons as hereafter may be authorized by the Court Each individual who receives CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION 25 hereby agrees to subject himself or herself to the jurisdiction of this Court for 26 purposes of any proceedings relating to the performance under, compliance with or 27 violation of this Protective Order. In addition, each individual falling within the 28 ________________________________________________________________ 6 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 definitions of Paragraphs 6.1(c), (e), (f), (g), (h) and (k) above who is permitted by 2 the Parties or their counsel to have access to CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION 3 shall be provided with a copy of this Protective Order for review prior to being given 4 such access. 5 Agreement in the form attached hereto as Exhibit A indicating that he or she has 6 read the Protective Order and agrees to comply with its terms. 6.3 7 Upon receiving the same, such person shall sign a Disclosure The signed Disclosure Agreements and Protective Orders provided for 8 in Section 6.2 shall be retained by the counsel of record for the Party disclosing the 9 CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION to the person(s) signing the Disclosure 10 Agreements. Copies of the executed Disclosure Agreements shall be preserved by 11 said counsel and shall be provided to the Producing Party if the Court so orders. 12 7. 13 SUBMISSION OF CONFIDENTIAL MATERIAL TO COURT 7.1 If a Party that designated Discovery Material as CONFIDENTIAL 14 wishes to include such material in any filing with the Court, the document 15 containing or attaching the CONFIDENTIAL Discovery Material shall be lodged 16 with the Court with an application for filing under seal in accordance with Local 17 Rule 79-5.1. If a Party wishes to include Discovery Material that another Party 18 designated as CONFIDENTIAL in any filing with the Court, the filing Party shall 19 notify the designating Party at least 7 days in advance of the filing date. The 20 designating Party shall prepare an application for filing the CONFIDENTIAL 21 Discovery Material under seal in accordance with Local Rule 79-5.1, which the 22 filing Party shall file with its other filing, while lodging the CONFIDENTIAL 23 Discovery material with the Court. The Party submitting the CONFIDENTIAL 24 Discovery Material shall mark on the outside of the envelope containing the 25 document the title of the action and a statement substantially in the following form: 26 "CONFIDENTIAL, FILED UNDER SEAL 27 28 ________________________________________________________________ 7 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 By order of the United States District Court for the Central District of California, 2 this envelope is not to be opened and its contents are not to be displayed or revealed 3 except by further order of the Court." 7.2 4 In the event a Party files a document containing CONFIDENTIAL 5 Discovery Material other than in accordance with this paragraph, any Party may 6 apply to the Court that such materials be placed under seal. 7.3 7 All pleadings and other court filings that contain CONFIDENTIAL 8 Discovery Materials shall include on the first page of such document, and all copies 9 thereof, a statement substantially to the effect that "This Document Contains 10 CONFIDENTIAL Materials." 11 8. CHALLENGES TO CONFIDENTIAL DESIGNATIONS 12 If, at any time, any Party claims that certain Discovery Material was 13 improperly designated as CONFIDENTIAL, or believes that it is necessary to 14 disclose such Material to persons other than those permitted by this Protective 15 Order, said Party shall notify the Designating Party in writing and the Parties shall 16 try to resolve their dispute in good faith on an informal basis. If the Parties are 17 unable to do so, the objecting Party may make an appropriate application to the 18 Court requesting that the specifically identified CONFIDENTIAL Discovery 19 Material be excluded from the provisions of this Protective Order or that they be 20 made available to specified other persons. The application shall be filed in 21 accordance with Local Rule 37. It shall be the burden of the Designating Party to 22 establish that the contested material is CONFIDENTIAL Discovery Material and 23 therefore properly designated as such. Unless and until a Court’s ruling is obtained 24 changing a designation, or the Parties agree otherwise, the Discovery Material 25 involved shall be treated according to its designation. 26 27 28 ________________________________________________________________ 8 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 9. RETURN OF CONFIDENTIAL DISCOVERY MATERIALS 9.1 2 The parties acknowledge that if the case proceeds to trial, all trial 3 exhibits and other information disclosed at trial that had been designated as 4 CONFIDENTIAL during the action will become public and will be presumptively 5 available to all members of the public, including the press, unless good cause is 6 shown to the Court in advance of the trial to proceed otherwise. 9.2 7 All other CONFIDENTIAL Discovery Material that has been disclosed 8 under this Protective Order, and all copies, summaries and excerpts thereof, shall be 9 returned to the Designating Party or destroyed, at the Receiving Party’s election, 10 within ninety (90) days of the final disposition of this action, including any appeals. 11 The Receiving Party shall certify in writing that all such material has been destroyed 12 or returned at the end of said ninety (90) day period. The terms of this Protective 13 Order will survive the termination of this litigation. 9.3 14 Notwithstanding the foregoing, counsel for the parties shall be 15 permitted to retain a file copy of materials created during the course of the litigation, 16 or made part of the record, or which have been filed under seal with the Clerk of the 17 Court and a copy of all depositions, including exhibits, and deposition evaluations. 18 10. INADVERTENT PRODUCTION OF PRIVILEGED OR WORK 19 PRODUCT INFORMATION 20 10.1 This Protective Order does not prejudice or otherwise limit the right 21 of any Party to oppose production of any documents or information on the ground of 22 attorney-client privilege, work product immunity or any other privilege or protection 23 provided under law. 24 10.2 If a Party inadvertently produces information that it considers 25 privileged or protected, in whole or in part, or learns of the production of privileged 26 or protected material by a third person, the Party asserting that an inadvertent 27 production has occurred must, within 30 days of the date of discovery of the 28 ________________________________________________________________ 9 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 inadvertent production, give notice to all Parties that the Party claims that the 2 document, in whole or in part, is privileged or protected. In addition, the notice 3 must state the nature of the privilege or protection and the factual basis for asserting 4 it. If the Parties cannot resolve the matter independently, the Parties agree to meet 5 and confer and file a joint statement with the Judge assigned to this case of the 6 results of such meeting. Thereafter, the Judge will order a conference or set the 7 matter for briefing and hearing, after which the Judge will enter an order on the 8 dispute. 9 document elects not to voluntarily return same to the Producing Party, no use of the 10 document may be made by the recipient until the Judge rules on the matter and the 11 Court rules on any appeal from that order. If the recipient of the inadvertently produced privileged or protected 12 10.3 If the Judge rules that an inadvertently produced document is privileged 13 or protected, all Parties shall, within thirty (30) days, return or destroy the segregated 14 copy and any other copies in their possession or control, and provide written 15 assurance that a diligent search has been conducted and that all such documents have 16 either been returned or destroyed. 17 11. INADVERTENT DISCLOSURE OF CONFIDENTIAL DISCOVERY 18 MATERIAL 19 11.1 An inadvertent or unintentional disclosure of "CONFIDENTIAL" 20 Discovery Material will not be construed as a waiver, in whole or in part, of (i) any 21 Party's claims of confidentiality either as to the specific information inadvertently or 22 unintentionally disclosed or as to any other confidential material disclosed prior or 23 subsequent to that date, or (ii) any Party's right to designate said material as 24 "CONFIDENTIAL" or pursuant to this Protective Order. 25 11.2 Should any documents, testimony, or information designated as 26 "CONFIDENTIAL" be disclosed, inadvertently or otherwise, to any person or Party 27 not authorized under this Order, then the Party responsible for the disclosure shall 28 ________________________________________________________________ 10 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 use its best efforts to (i) promptly retrieve the disclosed documents, testimony, or 2 information from such unauthorized person or party, (ii) promptly inform such 3 person or Party of all the provisions of this Protective Order, (iii) request such 4 person or Party sign the "Non-Disclosure Agreement" attached as Exhibit A, if 5 appropriate, (iv) identify such person or party immediately in writing to the 6 Producing Party that designated the documents, testimony or information as 7 "CONFIDENTIAL" and (v) identify the "CONFIDENTIAL" material in writing 8 immediately 9 "CONFIDENTIAL." If a Non-Disclosure Agreement is executed, it shall promptly 10 be served upon the party that designated the "CONFIDENTIAL" material. Nothing 11 in this paragraph shall limit the right of the party that designated the 12 "CONFIDENTIAL" material to seek relief from the Court as a result of a Party that 13 inadvertently or otherwise disclosed the material to a person or Party not authorized 14 under this Protective Order. 15 12. to the producing party that designated the material as ADDITIONAL PROVISIONS 16 12.1 This Protective Order does not prevent: (a) any disclosure of 17 CONFIDENTIAL Discovery Material by the Party who has designated such 18 Material; (b) any disclosure of CONFIDENTIAL Discovery Materials to the Court 19 or any other court, jury, arbitrator or tribunal adjudicating claims between the 20 Parties, except as may be limited by this Order; or (c) any disclosure of information 21 that a Receiving Party has obtained lawfully from a source other than the 22 Designating Party, even if the Designating Party has produced the same information 23 and designated it as CONFIDENTIAL pursuant to this Protective Order. 24 12.2 This Protective Order may be modified by further order of this Court. 25 Nothing contained herein shall be deemed to preclude any Party from waiving any 26 protection afforded to it under this Protective Order, provided such waiver is in 27 writing or is recorded in a transcript during deposition testimony. 28 ________________________________________________________________ 11 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 12.3 The Court shall retain jurisdiction over all persons bound by this 2 Protective Order during the pendency of this action and for such time thereafter as is 3 needed to carry out the terms of this Protective Order. 4 12.4 If any Party who previously received CONFIDENTIAL Discovery 5 Materials receives a subpoena or other compulsory process seeking the production 6 of all or some of those materials, that Party or its counsel shall notify counsel for the 7 Designating Party immediately in writing, via overnight mail, email or facsimile 8 transmission, of the receipt of such compulsory process. Said Party shall provide 9 counsel for the Designating Party with copies of that process and shall cooperate 10 with respect to any procedure sought to be pursued by the Party whose interest may 11 be affected. The Disclosing Party asserting the confidential treatment shall have the 12 burden of defending against such subpoena, process or order. 13 reasonable procedure sought to be pursued by the Party whose interest may be 14 affected, the person or Party receiving the subpoena or other process or order shall 15 be entitled to comply with it except to the extent the Disclosing Party asserting the 16 confidential treatment is successful in obtaining an order modifying or quashing it. 17 IT IS SO STIPULATED: 18 Subject to any THE LAW OFFICES OF GEORGE A. SHOHET 19 KREINDLER & KREINDLER LLP 20 21 22 23 24 DATED: August 22, 201 By: George A. Shohet Attorneys for Plaintiff Southern California Institute of Law 25 26 27 28 ________________________________________________________________ 12 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER Nicholas W. Sarris, Esq. KAUFMAN BORGEEST AND RYAN LLP 2397 5 Park Sorrento, Suite 370 Calabasas, CA 91302 Tel: 818-880-0992 Fax: 818-880-0993 Email : nsanis@kbrlaw. com 1 2 a J 4 5 6 1 1,'.L/,-" DATED: August 22,2011 tJ, S-r* Nicholas W. Sanis Attorneys for Defendant TCS Education System 8 9 10 Maurice Fitzgerald, Esq. STRAZULO FIT ZGERALD LLP 3991MacArthur Blvd. Suite 400 Newport Beach, CA 92660 Tel.: 949-333-0883 Fax: 949-748-6146 E -mai : mfitzger ald@str azlaw. c om 11 I2 13 t4 15 1 16 l7 l8 t9 ar*ttc-4d- DATED: August 22,2011 Maurice Fitzgerald Attorneys for Defendants David J. Figuli and Global Equities, LLC 20 2l 22 23 24 25 26 21 28 13 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 EXHIBIT A NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENT I , ________________________________________, understand that information and/or documents which are to be disclosed to me by counsel of record for ____________________________ (name of party), are “CONFIDENTIAL” and to be used by me solely to assist in the matter of Southern California Institute of Law v. TCS Education System, et. al., Case No. CV10-8026 JAK (AJWx), pending in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. I further understand that a Protective Order entered by the Court, a copy of which has been given to me, prohibits me from either using such information or documents for any other purpose or disclosing such documents and information to any person other than counsel of record or persons assisting them. In accepting disclosure, I agree to be bound by the Protective Order and to be subject to the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for the Central District of California for the purposes of its enforcement and the enforcement of my obligations under this Agreement. 17 18 Dated: _____________________________ 19 20 Name: _____________________________ 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 ________________________________________________________________ 14 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER 1 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE 2 The undersigned hereby certifies that all counsel of record who have 3 consented to electronic service are being served with a copy of the foregoing 4 document via Central District of California CM/ECF system on August 22, 2011. 5 6 7 By: George A. Shohet 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 ________________________________________________________________ 15 STIPULATION FOR ENTRY OF PROTECTIVE ORDER

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