Case File
efta-efta01070323DOJ Data Set 9OtherONE DOLLAR
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ONE DOLLAR
www.virginislandsdailynews.com
We Virgin Islands
DAILY
llll
NEWS
A Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper
•
•
•
•
1
!
I
•
secret Ingrealem is v.i. pride
Ors,. news Pnoio b, JASCN BRONIS
Vendors display their products during the first Virgin Fresh Value Added Market Day on Saturday at Rudolph Shulterbrandt Agriculture Complex on
St. Croix. The event showcased vendors who use locally grown food in their products. Page 5
$53 million
jewelry
heist Page 28
Vietnam war hero
Col. Bud Day dies at 88
Was McCain's ceilmate Page 27
Umpire, owner and player
inducted into
Cooperstown hall Page 61
Mi Banco Online MI okilpr;I
Popular Pay-by-Phone.
Vjsit popular:comb/I Orgall.1,088.724.3659
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Havensight
merchants
warn 30%
are on brink
Longer slow season,
construction, competition
hurting stores
Page 3
Scouts return from
national Jamboree
Page 2
For Eagle,
quitting was
not an option
,r
Page 2 Edwards
3 million
hear pope
in Rio
Pages 20-21
r www.facebook.com/virginislandsdailynews
U,' SWOOP
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EFTA01070323
2 The Virgin Islands Daily NeWS
VIR.CD4 ISLANDS
Miinday, July 29, 2013
Scouts represent V.I. at national Jamboree
By JOY BLACKBURN.
..
Daily News Staff, .
..• r.--i
'ST. CROIX — Some 25 local Boy ScritiN;
fresh from the National Scout Jamboree,
arrived at St. Croix's Rohlsen Airport Friday
afternoon.
"Our scouts, they participated. They made
friends. We had a good time," said Chris
Brooks, the scoutmaster for the confingeortfiat
went to the jamboree. "Where there were chal-
lenges tokbe met, we met them head-on" ,.. . .
"Ilte.frtt-oay Natio
Scout Jamboree, which
d: wi
theliloy:iSe46tikA etRielYjilailly.holds
everyffikeyearst
tens of tboUtands of
scouts, volmiteers, and staff from all over the
country,. ,,
TN) vrpsthp get yearthejambraree was held
at dicncut,Surerdit.Bechteltimily National
_ Seoul Reserve in- West Virginia's New River
Gorge area, which will now be the permanent
home frig the national jamboree. The reserve
encompomsPs 10,600 acres.. • .
r
.
'Mostly it was good;" Philip Edwards, 16,
the senior patrol leader for the Virgin Islands
group, said:of the experience.
Edwaids said a number ofstorma. and some
lightening cancelled a few activities, including
some zip line adventures the group had sched-
uled — but he described it as a "great trip" that
scouts enjoyed anyway.
; "I think they learned how to deal with disap-
pointment," he said.
- Marcus NOEICNIN; 14 and a patrol leader, said
V.I. Boy-Scouts arrive Friday at Rotten Airport on St. Croix after spending 10 days at the National
Stiout Jamboree in West Meginia.
•
it was his firstnational jamboree.
"1 think it was a very productive jamboree. It
was a wonderful experience," he said. "It was a
historical experience."
Norkaitis said it was historical because it was
the first national jamboree at the new reserve.
For years, the national jamboree had been held
at Fort A.P. Hill in Virginia.
The group also learned to work together, he
said.
"It was really cool because we all learned
teamwork," Norkaitis said. "We had some
problems at fast, but then we got more com-
fortable waling together, working as a team."
The 25 scouts from the territory included
boys from I I to 17 years old from both island
districts. They joined up with 10 scouts from
the District of Columbia for the jamboree,
Brooks said. The Virgin Islands District is part
of the National Capitol Area Council in D.C.,
*Brooks said.
Among the challenges the scouts faced was
RAni•annisio CrititinrAn
e A"; ca I no
lvldLLIievv LUVVCII uo °Lanai/co
• By JOY BLACKBURN •
Daily News Staff
, •
ST: CRODC — Local Boy Scout
• Matthew Edwards recently earned the
highest advancement award the Boy
Scouts ofAmerica offer, becoming an
Eagle Scout
"We're delighted. We are very
proud of him;" said Dale Edwards,
Matthew's father, on Friday as he and
Matthew's mother, Lori Edwards,
waited for other sons to return from
the National Scout Jamboree. "He
worked very hard for it"
Oily 4 percent of all Boy Scouts
become Eagle Siouis, according to a
release about Matthewattaining
efte Eagle rank
To become an Eagle Scout, a candi-
date has to earn 21 merit badges,11 of
which are specifically required, and
successfully complete a community.
related service project, the press release
said.
Matthew's project involved a major
cleanup at Buck Island Reef National
Monument
"I worked with the National Park
Service and I coordinated and then
helped them carry out a coastline/trail
cleanup on Buck Island," Matthew
said. The cleanup occurred as Buck
Island Reef National Monument was
celebrating its 50th anniversary.
Matthew, who has a brother who is
already an Eagle Scout and two other
brothers who are working toward
attaining the Eagle rank, said he has
been involved in scouting since he was
little, and he assumed he would become
in Eagle Scout
• although he lost
It was really cool because we all
learned teamwork. We had some
problems at first, but then we
got more comfortable working
together, working as a team. •
— Marcus Norkaits, 14, patrol leader
.
. .
getting up on time daily, gatmg tneu mean
prepared, and cleaning up. The hot, humid
weather in West Virginia was also a challenge,
as was thesize of the new site for the jamboree,
according to Brooks.
The new reserve is so large, the group some-
times had to walk tor more than an hour to get
to an activity, he said.
Because the 35 scouts who were part of the
group included scouts from St. Thomas, St. .
Croix and Washington D.C., who did not neces-
sarily know each other, one of the challenges
was getting them to work together, Brooks said.
Making the scouts from different areas into a
cohesive group that worked well together was
one of the major challenges, according to
Brooks.
"In doing that, they made friends for life," he
said. "All in all, our scouts came back with a
sense of accomplishment, a sense of friendship,
and a sense of being able to safely do whatever
task they were asked to do."
Cr^. it; nree ladrthact.
%AA-MAIM IV 0
I Ilyl
I
il.
interest for awhile when he got into
high school.
But when he became a senior, he
decided to complete what he started
and earn the rank of Eagle, he said.
"1 wanted to bow the accomplish-
ment of finishing it," he said, adding
that he also felt like it was a family
expectation.
So h c plunged back into it.
"I think it definitely gave me a lot of
perseverance and pushing through," he
said "A lot of it was a lot of papawork
and organizing."
Matthew said that becoming an
Eagle Scout required diligence and
dedication —but it was worth it.
His advice for others who would like
to become Eagle Scouts?
"Just not to give up because it's
worth it once you've done it," he said.
'lobe willing to put yourself out there,
do something you're not comfortable
doing, it's fulfilling."
Matthew is home-schooled and his
immediate plan after graduation is to
participate in a five-month discipleship
training school with a focus on worship
and music, through Youth With a
Mission, according .to the press
release.
He will be recognized as an Eagle.
Scout in a ceremony at 6:30 p.m.
Friday at the Howard M. Wall Scout
Matthew Edwards is the I Ith scout
to become an Eagle Scout in Troop
227, which was chartered by Country
Day School:
— Context reporter Joy Blackburn
at 714.9145 or email
jblackburn®drilynews.vi.
rank
I %Al in.
Matthew Edwards
tan 215S-3019
twirl •••• P.:I:hi-4
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EFTA01070324
Monday, July 29, 2013,
VIRGIN ISLANDS
The Virgiri,Islands Daily News 3
Struggling Havensight merchants see rent-abatement
as last chance for them to resuscitate their businesses
By AMANDA NORRIS
Daily News Staff
ST. THOMAS -- For merchants
at Havensight mall, it's summer
time, but the living is anything but
easy.
After being granted six months
of free rent by the mall's owner, the
Govemnient Employees Retirement
System. many said this has been
the worst off-season they have
experienced.
They cited a perfect storm of
prolonged road construction in
front of the mall, fewer cruise ships
docking in St. Thomas Harbor,
competition from Crown Bay mer-
chants and skyrocketing utility
costs.
When the GERS board voted to
relieve.the tenants of rent obliga-
tions from July I to Dec. 31, they.
did so because tenants had accumu-
lated a delinquency of more than
$2 million and reported that they
could no longer sustain the cost of
doing business. The board dis-
cussed the closure of Dockside
Bookshop, which has announced
that it will close within the next
two weeks after 35 years in
business.
GERS Administrator Austin
Nibbs presented the board with two
options: forego rent for six months
altogether with the stipulation that
tenants pay all arrearages by April
1 or give tenants a 25 percent
reduction in rent over the next 24
months. The board decided the six
month abatement, which would
cost GERS a little more than $3
million, would be the most feasible
way to give tenants a chance to pay •
the $2 million in back rent owed.
"I don't like this rent abatement,
but if we want to continue to have
tenants, we arc going to have to
help them," Nibbs said.
At the meeting, some board
members were under the impres-
sion that another Havensight busi-
ness,'an office supply store called
The Draughting Shaft, was also
scheduled to close, but, according
to. The Draughting Shaft owner,
Icily Robinson, that was never the
case.
•
Nevertheless, Robinson said, he
has had discussions with GERS
board members and attended meet-
ings to inform them of the adverse
conditions that had caused him to
Tall behind in his rent.
Robinson said his business, unlike
many of the boutiques and stores that
cater primarily to tourists, had been
unduly hit by prolonged construc-
tion, with orange barricades diverting
traffic into and out of the mall's park-
ing lots.
Daly Neon Fk mow
Docks-de Bookshop n Havensight Mall is scheduled to close within the next.
two weeks after 35 years in business.
"Many of our customers arc locals
and residents, and many have called
and said they just don't want to come
in because they don't want to deal
with, it," Robinson said of the con-
struction.
Robinson is among a number of
long-time Havensight merchants who
say they have been in business for
decades but never had to weather
anything quite like the last six
months.
"I remember in the 80s the slow
season was only three months, now
it is a full six months," Ram Mirpuri, •
president of the Havensight
Merchants Association said.
Mirpuri's son, Minoj Mirpuri, owns
Bliss Jewelers.
Ram Mirpuri said he hoped the
Daly News File Photo
Havensight Mall merchants say because of the ongoing Long Bay road
project, rising V.I. Water and Power Authority bills and other issues that they
have had their worst off-season ever. The Government Employees Retirement
System, the mall's owner, has granted the merchants six months of free rent
to help them repay $2 million in overdue rent.
Gi
We were almost closing down. There was no way we
could survive. We are extremely grateful for the
abatement. tt will be a big help.
six-month abatement would be the
"springboard" Havensight mer-
chants need to recover. If not, about
30 percent of the association's mem-
bership had reported that they would
go under this year or the next, he
said.
"The mall has been hurting since
Crown Bay opened. We lost about
500,000 passengers because of that,"
Mirpuri said. He added that the larg-
er Carnival cruise ships, the Oasis of
the Seas and the Allure of the Seas,
dock at Crown Bay, where the har-
bor can support them.
Projections arc that, with more
cruise ships scheduled through
2014, businesses on the brink of clo-
sure might be able to use the abate-
ment to get through to a break-
through season in the winter of
2014, Mirpuri said.
Other merchants said their WAPA
bills had tripled or quadrupled since
they opened, leaving them to won-
der if an abatement would be enough
to counter the rising rates.
"WAPA is killing us," Sonny
Panjabi, owner of the Casa Blanca
jewelry store, said. Utility bills total
$3,000 during the busy season, and
— Sonny Panjabi,
jewelry store owner
$2,000 during the slow season, when
hours of operation arc cut back, he
said.
"We were almost closing down.
There was no way we could survive.
We are extremely grateful for the
abatement. It will be a big help," he
said.
Since the recession hit, travelers
"seem to spend all their money on
the trip itself, and they come with
less disposable income," according
to Jerry Woodhouse, president of St.
John's Bay Rum, a fragrance compa-
ny that supplies other Havensight
stores and has offices behind the
mall.
Woodhouse also said that in the
last decade hotels, which used to pro-
vide transportation to shopping dis-
tricts, have shifted to providing as
many amenities as possible to guests
and have limited the excursions to
beaches rather than shopping
districts.
"They want to grab as much reve-
nue as possible per customer while
they are staying at the hotel,"
•
Woodhouse said.
— Contact An:ark Norr rot 714-9104
or email a rt irk qd a 1
plevismi
EFTA01070325
4 The Virgin. Islan*Dally News
VIRQIN, ISLANDS
Monday, July 29, 201Z
The Standard
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EFTA01070326
Monday,,.iulq 29;2013'
Vikanklgaikijig
•
V.I. government agencies defend budget requests
By AMANDA NORRIS
Daily News Staff
St THOMAS — Last week, the
Senate Finance Committee heard tes-
timony on fiscal yeary2014 budgets
from the Bureau of Motor Vehicles,
the Public Services Commission and
the V.I. Economic Development
Authority.
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
Bureau of Motor Vehicles Director
Terris Browne defended a General
Fund appropriation of S1,642,010 as
sufficient to meet the bureau's
needs. The request is a 5 percent
decrease, or $86,422, less than the
2013 appropriation
Eighty-eight percent will go
toward personnel services and fringe
benefits, and the budget will be sup-
plemented by a projected income of
S I million from the bureau's revolv-
ing funds and another $643,854
from the personalized license plate
fund, for a total operating budget of
$3,285,864.
To meet fiscal constraints imposed
by the governor's 5 percent cuts to
most departments to balance the fis-
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cal 2013 budget, the bureau elimi-
nated two General Fund positions:
an executive assistant and motor
vehicle inspector, according to
Browpe's testimony.
The fiscal 2014 operating budget
contains money for 52 positions,
and to further meet fiscal obliga-
tions, the bureau intends to leave
unfilled two more General Fund
positions, according to Browne's
testimony.
A critical hiring plan leaves room
for five vacant positions to be filled,
however, Browne testified.
The bureau's accomplishments
for fiscal 2013 include: completing
a REAL ID card concept design
which allow for forensic analysis
and provides specialized identifica-
tions to government employees;
integratting facial recognition soft-
ware, providing 24 hour access to
the BMV database for law enforce-
ment, installing additional security
cameras and completing two grant
packages for Division of Higheay
Safety awards totalling 5730,000 to
be used to fund the motorcycle safe-
ty education program and to accom-
modate online vehicle registration.
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Public Services Commission
Public Services Commission
Executive Director Keithley Joseph
testified that it is the commission's
mission's goal to move from being a
"government organization that is reac-
tive to a proactive public policy mak-
ing agency with results-based
management"
The Public Services Commission is
primarily funded through assessments
levied on the utilities it regulates.
Joseph testified that the fiscal 2014
budget request from the V.I. govern-
ment for the commission would be
$1,620,740. This represents an
increase of $57,373, or 3.54 percent,
from its fiscal 2013 revenursassess-
meat of $1,563,367. Pursuant to
Virgin Islands Code establishing the
commission and stipulating that it be
100 percent funded by fees levied to
the utilities it regulates, the commis-
sion's budget request reflects what it
needs to maintain operations while it
collects outstanding assessment from
communications, water and electric,
and public transportation companies,
Joseph said.
The commission's uncollected rev-
enues from fiscal 2013 are $384,630,
according to Joseph's testimony.
It is anticipated that in fiscal 2014,
the commission will collect a total of
$1,620,739 from the V.I. Water and
Power Authority; VITELCO,
Innovative Cable, Varlack Ventures,
Transportation Services and the V.1.
Waste Management Authority, accord-
ing to testimony.
A total of$1,081.113 will go toward
"personal services and fringes,"
according to testimony.
V.I. Economic
Development Authority
V.I. Economic Development
Authority Chief Executive Officer
Percival Clouden requested a General
Fund appropriation of $5,043,274.
This amount represents an increase
of $325,574, or 6.9 percent over the
fiscal 2013 appropriation.
According to Clouden, the addi-
tional money is needed to match fed-
eral funds for a small business incu-
bator program, to institute a more
aggressive marketing strategy for the
Economic 'Development
Commission's tax incentive program
and to enhance computer data analy-
sis programs for the Economic
Development Commission and the
lending divisions, according to
Clouden's testimony.
During fiscal 2013, the authority
received S2 million in grants from
the United States Department of
Commerce Economic Development
Administration to assist small and
mid-size businesses in the territory.
The authotity also relocated its offic-
es on St. Thomas, realizing a 20 per-
cent savings rental costs, 48 percent
in utilities and 15 percent in other
related expenses, Clouden said.
Also during fiscal 2013, the
authority realized a 4 percent increase
in collations and saw a 37 percent
decrease in the number of delinquent
borrowers due to enhanced litigation
efforts, Clouden said.
To date, the authority has approved
$692,606 in new 2013 loans and col-
lected $842,224 in outstanding
accounts. The number of delinquent
borrowers stands at 242, for a total of
$7,470,534, according to Clouden's
testimony.
—Corttai Amendallonis at 7149104
or email [email protected].
-r
There's a new option for treating uterine fibroids.
It's non-surgical and doesn't require a hospital stay.
It's uterine fibroid embolization (UFE) performed by
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Learn more at www.radiology.vi or
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EFTA01070327
6 The Virgin Islands Daily News
VIRGIN ISLANDS
Monday, July 29, 2013
HOVENSA cuts price
for regular by 4 cents
Daily News staff
ST. CROIX
After two wet
of significant increases in wholesale
gasoline prices in the territory, some
of the prices slipped slightly down-
ward today as HOVENSA adjusted
its rack rates.
The changes lowered the rack
rates — the price of fuel purchased
wholesale at the HOVENSA truck-
loading station on St. Croix — for
regular gasoline by 4 cents per gal-
lon and for premium gasoline by a
penny per gallon, while diesel fire)
increased by 4 cents per gallon.
Under today's adjustments, inde-
pendent gas station operators in the
territory now are paying 53.45 per
gallon for regular gasoline, $3.79
per gallon for premium gasoline,
and S3.57 per gallon for diesel fuel
when they buy their firel wholesale -
at HOVENSA. Those prices include
the 14-celiac-per-gallon tax that the
refinery collects for the
government.
Independent gas
station operators in
the territory now are
paying $3.45 per gallon
for regular gasoline
' The rack rates influence retail
gasoline prices in the territory
because independent gas station
operators can buy their gasoline at
the loading station, then resell it to
their customers. The new rates are
effective through Sunday.
On the retail side, average retail
gasoline prices in the U.S. on
Thursday were also slightly down
from a week ago, according to the
American Automobile Association.
The average retail gasoline price
in the U.S. on Thursday was 53648-
per gallon for regular, 53.976 per
gallon for premium, and 53.883 per
gallon for diesel fuel, according to
AAA.
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340-775-3784
Made and grown in the V.I.
Medicaid reimbursements to increase
Daily News Staff
ST. CROIX — The V.l. Human
Services Department on Friday
released a notice of intent to amend
the VI. Medicaid State Plan concern-
ing the reimbursement of enrolled
physicians. •
The statement indicates that
Medicaid reimbursement in the terri-
tory may be increasing.
For services provided in the terri-
tory, "upon approval by the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services
with a target effective date of Aug. 1,
2013, physicians in private practice
enrolled as V.I. Medicaid Program
enrolled providers will be eligible to
receive reimbursement from the U.S.
Virgin Islands Medicaid program for
both inpatient and outpatient servic-
es" at 100 percent of the V.I.
Medicare allowable rate, the release
states.
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Shoppers browse vendors' tables
during the first Virgin Fresh Value
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Shulterbrandt
Agriculture Complex on St. Croix.
The event showcased vendors
who use locally grown food to
produce processed or packaged
items. Items for sale included
jams, jellies, hot sauce, dressings.
seasonings, fruit juices, smoothies
and mead wine.
Foods made with local mangoes
are displayed.
"All such services must be autho-
rized from the department or its
agents," the release said.
For physician services provided
outside the territory, the V.I.
Medicaid Program will reimburse
physiciags enrolled in the V.I.
Medicaid Program for both inpatient
and outpatient services at the
Medicare rate in the state where the
service was rendered, according to.
the release.
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Ely The VirairitiSfrid41Sitilif News
FOR THE RECORD
Kiii-)Wcidy7 SUS. 29;`2013
Pa msordc
Authorities targeting unregistered sex offenders
By JENNY KANE
Deity News Staff
ST. THOMAS — Although a
sweep for unregistered sex offenders
netted nine unregistered offenders in
recent weeks, an unknown number
still remain at large in the territory.
The Virgin Islands Department of
Justice paired with local police and
U.S. marshals to sweep the islands
for unregistered sex offenders last
week, primarily targeting ones that
have been convicted within the
Virgin Islands. All but two local
unregistered offenders last week
were arrested and charged with fail-
ing to register.
Local police and U.S. Marshals
initially arrested five unregistered
offenders on St. Croix and three on
St. Thomas in just seven days, and
then arrested another at the very end
of last week on St. Thomas — bring-
ing the total to nine.
The department, however, has little
way of knowing how many unregis-
tered offenders are here from other
jurisdictions. Within the territory,
offenders are required to register
annually, though offenders sometimes
come to the islands without notifying
their jurisdiction of their move.
"They are supposed to notify
someone," said Virgin Islands
Attorney General Vincent Frazer.
"We go out and look for them, bu
someodt has to notify us."
The sweep last week was the sec
Name
St. Thomas
Ovatia Mlln Andre
Cyril EteMau
Robert Evans Sr
Robert E. Francis
Sylvane Gilbert
Jean A. Hatthett
Sanuel A. Henry
Bernard 0 take
Daniel LaPlace
Winthrop Gregory Levis
•
Elizabeth Magian
Ulan Agatha Mathew
Lud a L. Francis Mitraine
Cornelius Powell Sr
Francis Howard Pratt
Crag Leger Schneider
Elma Vanterpool
• Funeral Schedule •
Date of death
.
Service
Pendirg
Attangtanda
Davis
' July 18, 2013
Pending
Davis
.. June 15. 2013
Perdirg
John Thomas
July18, 2013
Aig. 10
.. Davis
July 3, 2013
Pending
Turnbull's
July 25, 2013
Pelting
John Thomas
My 15. 2013
Pendirg
•
Turnbull's
July 1.8, 2013
Pending
•
Davis
July 13, 2013
Pending
John Thomas
AO 24, 2013
Pending
Davis
July 20, 2013
Petting '
Turnbulrs
July 20, 2013
Pending
Turnbull's
July 23, 2013
Pendirg
Oases
July 22, 2013
Pendirg
Turnbuts
.July 17, 2013
Perzlirg
John Thomas
• July 22, 2013
Today
Golden Gae
July 20, 2013
Pendirg •
Turnbull's
Today
No meetings.
Tuesday
The Culture, Historic Preservation,
Youth and Recreation Committee will.
Senate Agenda
meet at 10 a.m. in Ottley Legislative
Hall on St. Thomas to hear bills on:
• Making the queen conch shell the
official shell of the Virgin Islands
• Authorizing the Department of'
Sports; Parks and Recreation to devel.
op a master plan for creating a public
park and recreational area at Altona
Lagoon on St. Croix.
• Redefining the use of the Enid M.
Baa Library and Archives Building.
• Naming the archives division of
the Charles Wesley Turnbull Regional
Library the "June Lindquist Archives
Division."
• Conducting a feaskility student to
establish a festival and cultural park on
St 'acmes.
Wednesday
No meetings,
Thursday
The Student Public Health Forwn
will be held from 10:30 a.m. to noon
in Ottley Legislative Hall on St.
Thomas.
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and "Operation Island Sweep" io the
territory, Frazer said.
Currently, 55 sex offenders are
registered between St Thomas and
St. John, and 42 sex offenders are
registered on St. Croix.
•
Sex offenders are obligated to reg-
ister in whatever community they
reside in under federal law and terri-
torial law, so as to make communi-
ties aware of where offenders live.
The department encouraged com-
munity members to visit usvinsopw.
gov to access the registry and view
the list of sex offenders in the Virgin
Islands.
The department also asked that
anyone knowing the whereabouts of
an unregistered sex offender to con-
tact it at 774-5666 on St. Thomas
or 7734295 on St. Croix and pro-
vide information to one of the Sex
Offender Registry coordinators.
— Contact reporter Jenny Kane
at 714-9102 or email
[email protected].
Police Reports
The police blotter is the V.I.
Terretorial Emergency Management
Agency's list of incidents and the
time they were reported to police.
St. Croix
Incidents in the police blotter over
the weekend included.
Assault -
6:39 p.m. Friday,
Strawberry; 3:01 p.m. Saturday,
Queen Street, Christiansted; 3:23
p.m. 'Saturday, Prince Streetm
Frederiksted; 12:03 a.m. Sunday, La
Reinc; 2:38 p.m. Sunday, Mars Hill;
6:17 p.m. Sunday, no location
given.
Burglary —3:43 p.m. Sunday,
Hannah's Rest.
Fighting — 9:01 p.m. Friday;
Harbour View Housing Community,
5:57 p.m. Saturday, Union and Mt.
Washington; 7:55 p.m. Saturday,
Mars Hill; 11:31 a.m. Sunday, Peters
Rest; 11:57 a.m. Sunday, Welcome;
4:37 p.m. Sunday, Plessen; 6.18 p.m.
Sunday, Frederiksted.
Larceny -
9:47 a.m. Saturday,
Lower Love; 2:19 p.m. Saturday,
Christiansted; 6:19 p.m. Sunday,
Dismond.Ftuby.
Outside Ike - 8:34 p.m. Friday,
La Grange; 9:15 a.m. Sunday, Marys
Fancy; 4:20 p.m. Sunday, New
Street, Frederiksted.
Reckless Endangerment —
6:42 a.m. Sunday, Mutual Homes.
Robbery —5:14 p.m. Sunday,
Yellow Cedar.
Weapons — 8:09 p.m. Friday, La
Grange; 10:46 p.m. Friday, Mutual
Homes Housing Community; 11:34
p.m. Friday, Profit; 4:39 p.m.
ral NU&
9 Cl tL1 0.045,
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U0.774-7721. watthrup
Saturday Harbourview Housing
Community, 5:40 p.m. Prince Street,
Frederiksted; 9:16 p.m. Saturday,
Bellvue; 4:26 a.m. Sunday, Castle
Coakley; 6:14 a.m. Sunday,
Mountain; 5:57 a.m. Sunday, Luis
Hospital.
St. Thomas
Incidents in the police blotter over
the weekend included:
Assault -
10:10 p.m. Friday,
Hull Bay; 10:21 p.m. 'Friday,
Bordeaux; 1:40 p.m. Saturday, no
location given.
• Burglary — 6:38 p.m. Friday,
Nadir; 7:06 p.m. Friday, Frenchtown;
9:16 a.m. Saturday, Charlotte Amalie;
4:29 p.m. Saturday, Altona.
bdecency — 4:06 p.m. Saturday,
Red Hook.
Larceny -
1:18 p.m. Saturday,
Frenchman's Bay; 1:32 p.m. Solberg
3:58 p m. Saturday, Altona; 11:42
a.m. Sunday, no location given.
Robbery - 9:58 a.m. Sunday, no
location given.
Runaway — 8:32 a.m. Sunday,
Lucinda Millis Home.
Vehitle fire -
9:52 p.m. Friday,
Black Point Hill; 2:39 p.m. Sunday,
Estate Frydendahl.
Watercraft in distress -
7:15
p.m. Sunday, Magens Bay Beach.
St. John
Incidents in the police blotter over
the weekend included:
Runaway -
5:04 p.m. Sunday,
Westin Resort.
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I
30 The Virgin Islands Daily News
OPINIONS
Monday, July 29, 2013
The Virgin Islands Daily News
a
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Published by Daily News Publishing Co.
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Hedy Szata Business Manager
What a city owes its residents
Though it is the biggest city in
U.S. history to file for bankruptcy,
Detroit is only one of 26 urban
municipalities that have gone into
bankruptcy or state receivership fa
fiscal insolvency since 2008. Detroit
should draw attention and debate to
a challenging issue underlying all
these public insolvencies: What
level of public services will we pro-
tect and guarantee for U.S. cities?
The Bankruptcy Court will have
to face that question. It will have to
determine whether Detroit can cut
into current services any more than
it already has. Unless the state or
federal government steps in with
funds for operating costs, the habit-
ruptcy will function as a zero-sum
game, with residents fighting credi-
tors for a share of city revenue.
Creditors have contracts to monetize
what they are seeking, but how
should the court determine the pub-
lic spending that residents need
today and tomorrow?
Politicians and judges who man-
age local fiscal crises speak of
maintaining basic services and
ensuring residents' minimal health
and safety, but these concepts are
short on specifics. While ow laws
provide an entitlement to a public
education, and we have long strug-
gled to interpret what constitutes a
legally adequate education, there is
little to nothing that would tell us
what other services the local public
sector must provide.
As a matter of law, there is no
such thing as a crime rate that is too
high or an ambulance response time
that is too long. Should there be?
For now, it is left to politics and
moral judgment to determine wheth-
a it is acceptable that less than one
in three streetlights arc operational
in Detroit or that the city has 80,000
abandoned and blighted structures
that it cannot afford to detholish. In
Detroit, as in many other struggling
cities, dramatic police layoffs mean
that the average wait time after a
9I I call for a police officer is 58
minutes, and a resident can rarely
summon an officer at all if the
. reported crime is not in progress and
violent.
As for other public functions that
a high-poverty city (especially one
with.severe winters) might hope to
have — such as reliable bus ser-
vice, playground equipment, indoor
basketball courts, after-school pro-
grams, active libraries and commu-
nity centers for the elderly — these
Michelle Wilde Anderson
services are decades into deep cuts
and widespread closures. Indeed,
having curtailed everything beyond
emergency services, it would be
tempting to refer to a government
like Detroit's as a night-watchman
state — the libertarian ideal of a
government focused only on public
safety.
That is, we'd be tempted to use
such a term for Detroit, and cities
like it, were it not such a cruel irony:
Detroit had more than 15,200 vio-
lent crimes and 500 acts of arson in
2012. The night watchmen arc
understaffed and underpaid.
According to a 2012 study by econ-
omists Aaron Chalfin and Justin
McCrary, public spending in Detroit
on each police officer (including all
wages, benefits and retirement costs)
is less than two-thirds what it is just
45 miles away in the prosperous
university town of Ann Arbor.
As a political and moral matter, as
much as a legal one, Detroit repre-
sents an opportunity to take a stand.
for urban habitability. What belongs
on our list of minimum standards fa
a city? Detroit invites us to have a
public conversation about what ser-
vices and public spaces we expect
from city governments for human
dignity and for humans to flourish.
We have a chance to say that no one
should have to wait hopelessly for
an ambulance, that a violent crime
in a neighborhood every few hours
is intolerable.
Paying for such commitments
should not just be the burden of
creditors. Many of the city's credi-
tors arc rank-and-file public employ-
ees and retirees who have counted
on a public pension and are not eli-
gible for Social Security. Detroit's
bankruptcy plan could send them
into poverty in their old age.
Basic services and safety in our
cities arc the responsibility pf
states, the federal government, the
private sector and voters. It is all of
them — all of us — who have a
role to play in the stabilization that
Detroit is seeking,through bank-
ruptcy. All of us have a responsibil-
ity to help them give basic health
and safety real meaning, and to
make this bankruptcy a safety net,
not a punishment
— Michelle Wilde Anderson is an
assistant professor of law at UC
Berkeley School opine
•
Mrs. Anthony Weiner is Hillary 2.1
I sat there watching the television
screen as Anthony Weiner squirmed
before the microphones for the second
time in two years, and realized that
this was a dep vu moment
At first I thought it was because the
former congressman and aspiring
mayoral candidate was, once again,
apologizing for tweeting and cheating
without really meeting. And then I
took one look at Weiner's wife and
realized that this had absolutely noth-
ing to do with the fellow.
Huma Abedin might have creamy
olive skin, beautiful brown eyes and
long dark hair, but you don't need to
put ha in a pantsuit and slap a head-
band on her tresses to realize that we
arc now in the presence of Hillary
Clinton, version 2.1.
We all remember the pre-Senate,
pre-State Department Hillary who
inspired both awe and revulsion for
her assault on the East Wing. Never
before had we been treated to a first
lady who so blatantly and brazenly
sought equal status with the guy we'd
actually elected.
Eleanor Roosevelt, her idol, had
exercised a considerable amount of
weight behind the scenes. But it
wasn't until Franklin died that she
really came into her own. Not so Mrs.
Clinton, or, 'rather, Mrs. Rodham
Clinton
It was painfully obvious to anyone
paying attention that Bill's wife was
hell bent on giving us that two-for-one
bargain that the couple had promised
during the campaign. Say what you
will about her, Hillary was a force to
be reckoned with. And praised. And
loathed. Even her most strident ene-
mies didn't underestimate her survival
instincts.
Health care? (If at fast you don't
succeed ... .) Whitewater? (Did any-.
Christine M. Flowers
one say rafting?) Vince Foster?
(Personal tragedy, nothing more.)And
then came the stream of women:
Gennifer (no relation) Paula (a genu-
ine victim)and, of course, "A little bit
of Monica."
Anyone who thought that Hillary
was going to let the Bimbo Bombs
destiny her carefully constructed plans
clearly didn't know just who they
were dealing with. Our first lady stood
by her philandering man and rode the
crest of a sympathetic Wave into the
Senate. Mrs. Wynette Goes To
Washington, so to speak.
And who did she take with her on
that long and fruitful journey, ever
upward, ever more successfully? Why
none other than Mn. Weiner, the love-
ly, inscrutable Huma.
Hillary once said that she had one
daughter, but tha‘if she had another it
would be her beloved personal
assistant.
HumaAbedin has been by her men-
tor's sidc for almost two decades, and
it is reasonable to think that she spent
a large part of that time taking notes
about how to thrive and survive in the
political jungle. Therefore, it is not
surprising that she (1) chose to many
an animal indigenous to that environ-
ment i.e., a cheetah, and (2) figured
out how to make sure that she could
withstand whatever wounds he man-
aged to inflict on their shared
ambitions
Anthony's wife has taken a page
from her pseudo-maina's dog-eared
book and has perfected the art of dam-
age control.
First, you assume a posture of dig-
nified disappointnient, wherein your
whole body seems to just "sigh" under
the weight of the offensive conduct.
It's a cross between an"' can't believe
he did this to me" and a "boys will be
boys, God bless their randy little
hearts." Then, you gaze sadly at the
perpetrator as he stares into the cam-
era and apologizes for the second,
third or 13th time for being a pervert
with his privates. Then, you allow him
to draw a line in the sand where he
says he might be sorry but he won't
go gentle into that good campaign and
is continuing to seek the mayoral
prize.
And then you spring into action.
You straighten your shoulders, raise
youn pointed chin, allow a few wisps
of that luxuriant velvet lair to fall
across your delicately drawn cheek
and assume a stoic pose. You love-
him, you say. You believe in him, you
say. You forgive him, you say. You
idiot, we say.
But you do not hear us speaking,
because you do not care what the pea-
nut gallery thinks. This is not about
the crowds massed to watch this pub-
lic shaming. This is not even about
your husband who, truth be told, is
probably sleeping in the garage these
days, which is why he has both the
time and the inclination to tweet
This is about something far more
important to you, perhaps almost as
important as the figure of the child
you and the Tweeter have in common.
This is about your political survival
Hums Abedin learned at the fed of
a master, someone who might very
well parlay her experience as scorned
wife into an office in the West Wing.
Huma is a bit more modest, of course.
Seems she'd be content to redecorate
Grade Mansion
—Christine M Flowers is a lawyer
and columnist for the Philadelphia
Daily News.
THE CAUSE of DEATH
WAS DEBT, POLITICS
AND UNFUNDED
PEN510NS.
a
EFTA01070331
Monday, July 29, 2013
OPINIONS
The Virgin Islands Daily News 31
Luring elephants into big tent
Republican national chairman Reince C. Priebus
could take a lesson from history in his efforts to
herd his fellow elephants into a big tent. Nobody
did a better job of coaxing feuding Republicans to
cooperate than Ray C. Bliss, the Akron, Ohio,
insurance man who chaired the national committee
from 1965 to 1969. His success is worth
remembering.
When Bliss became chairman in 1965, the
Republicans were in much worse shape than in
2013: President Lyndon Johnson had won a land-
slide Fe-election over Arizona Sen. Barry
Goldwater, and the Democrats held large majorities
in both houses of Congress and the statehouses.
The party was deeply divided between "moder-
ates," such as New Yak Gov. Nelson Rockefeller,
and "conservatives," like Goldwater. The latter
appeared to bless strident voices when he famously
proclaimed: "Let me remind you that extremism in
defense of liberty is no vice. And let me remind
you also that moderation in pursuit of justice is no
virtue."
Although best known as a "nuts-and-bolts" party
mechanic, Bliss used a two-step approach to
address these ideological rifts.
The first step was to challenge voices that made
Republicans look extreme to voters. On Nov. 5, 1965,
he issued n even-handed critique of "radicals" on the
left and right, singling out a staunchly anti-communist
firebrand Robert Welch
"One of my major concans in the matter of extrem-
ism of the radical right is that honest, patriotic andcon-
scientious conservatives maybe misjudged because of
irresponsible radicals such as Robert Welch, who has
accused President Eisenhower of being a 'dedicated,
conscious agent of the Communist conspiracy."'
"We've got to get this (party) in the middle of the
road," Bliss explained, "Eisenhower and his people
have takenessough."
There was a sharp badthih One letla writer called
Bliss "sneaky" and thither.
"You recently asked all Republicans to get out of the
A N0,14 9JkVg GU666sTG
THAT 17% OF AMWANG
Ail LIVING IN A WoRIV
OF MGM, SEPARATC9
COMPlgli FRa'vt EALIIY.
William Hershey & John C. Green
strongest and most effective anti-Communist organiza-
tion in the United States. I question your motives."
Bliss wasn't bothered by the criticism. "I don't
have the rotation I have all the answers," he told
reporters,"everything is compromise?:
His second step was leading Republicans to com-
mon ground.
The means was the Republican Coordinating
Committee. Its members were a cross-section of
the party: Eisenhower and four former presidential
candidates — Goldwater, Richard Nixon, Alfred
Landon and Thomas Dewey — as well as gover-
nors, members of Congress, state legislators and
party leaders.
Eisenhower was a key to the committee's work.
"He backed me up in the early d ys of my chair-
manship," Bliss reported, "He had the respect of all
factions."
The method was face-to-face dialogue.
"You don't say anything nasty, at least not pub-
licly, about somebody you're going to dinner with
tonight," Bliss said.
The committee eventually produced 48 policy
proposals, offering an alternative to President
Johnson's "Great Society" program.
In the end, Bliss got the results he wanted: the GOP
made a huge comeback in the 1966 elections, and in
1968, it won back the White House
•
Of course, 2013 is not 1965. Mitt Romney is no
Barry Goldwater, nor is the party division identical.
Andthe GOP may lack an Eisenhower to rally around.
Still, Chairman Priebus could take a lesson from
Chairman Bliss success in herding the elephants into a
big tent.
— William Hershey is a former Knight-Ridder
Washington correspondent and Columbus bureau chief
for Ilse Alcron Beacon Journal and Dayton Dal oi News.
John Green is director of the Bliss Institute of
Applied Politics at the University of Abon.
rl
Time to hard-delete Carlos Danger
When you puzzle over why the ele-
gant Huma Abedin is propping up the
eel-like Anthony Weiner, you must
remember one thing. Huma was raised
in Saudi Arabia, where women are
treated worse by men than anywhere
else on the planet.
Comparatively speaking, the pol
from Queens probably seems like a
prince. Even though he's a punk. After
he got caught seating and flashing
women online in 2011, he promised to
"never, ever" do that to his family again
and slouched away from Congress. He
cyber-creeped other young women in a
pervy bout of tweet du seigneur as his
wife traveled the world with Hillary
Clinton while she was secretary of
state.
Yet, while married to the classy, gor-
geous mother of his infant son and
planning a redemptive run for mayor,
he told a Pacebook friend and phone-
sex partner be had never met that he
loved her. Then he told her to "hard-
delete" all their correspondence — if
that is what you call it.
Aside from his zany Zorro-like nom
de pan, Carlos Danger, Weiner h s been
called many things. His digital girlfriend
and fellow extreme exhibitionist, Sydney
Leathers (whose n me sounds lice a nom
de porn), said that Weiner described him-
self to her accurately as "an argumenta-
tive, perpetually horny middle-aged
man?'
But Weiner'sGoya•esquegrotesquerie
earns him another name the "Rosemary's
Baby" of the Clinton&
Bill nd Hillary Clinton transformed
the way we look at sex scandals. They
plowed through the-ridicule, refused to
slink away in shame like Gary Hart, said
it was old news, and argued that if Hillary
didn't object, why should voters?
Poppy Bush thought Americanswould
tercet BillClinton in 1992 because of his
lascivious ways, but he learned that vot-
en are more concerned with how their
• own lives will be changed than they are
with politicians duplicitous private lives.
Americans keep moving the marker of
cceptabk behavior, partly as a reflection
of the coarsening of society and partly as
a public acknowledgment that many poll
with complicated personal lives have
been good public servants
Now, defining deviancy downward,
Seder and Sefiora Danger are using the
Clinton playbook.
The difference is, there's nothing in
Weiner's public life that is Seeming. In
12 years in Congress, hem naged to get
only one minor bill passed, on behalf of a
donor, and he doesn't work well with
people. He knows how to be loud on
cable and wave his Zorro sword in our
faces.
Some sex scandals, like Mark
Sanford's, fall into the realm of flawed
human nature, ad some, like Weiner's, .
fall into the realm of "Seriously, what is
Maureen Dowd
wrong with you?"
Huma gained renown, movie star suit-
ors and a Vogue spread as the stylish
Muslim Garbo silently and efficiently
parting the waves fa Hillary. She had to
be resilient to work her way up from
intern to consigliere in 'tough
Hillaryworld, and she saw firsthand how
the Clintons beat hack foes.
They love Huma, but the Clintons,
now showcasing philanthropy and public
service preparatory to Hillary's 2016 run,
are not happy about geeing dragged into
the lewd spectacle that is a low-budget
movie version of their masterpiece.
The former president is distancing
himselL one associate said, noting, "He's
not getting anywhere near that grenade."
Huma's friends are "skive:kg-my-fon-
head astounded," as one put it, that
Weiner would get in the race knowing
the online land mines that would rock
Huma's world again and torpedo the
=Taiga
Weiner wooed Huma assiduously,
showing up at the Westchester airport
in the wee hours to pick her up when
she came back from trips with Hillary.
"They were two hyperdrive young
brains that just clicked," said a friend.
"She liked his Borscht Belt humor."
Her circle understands that "you love
who you love," asone put it, marveling
at Weiner's "madonna-whore" com-
plex played out online. But that doesn't
mean that you ask people to vote for
someone who's dreadfully flawed for a
major office, just because you love
him.
They are worried that puma's deci-
sion to vouch for her husband is start-
ing to hurt her, the one person they all
assumed would never be ensnared in
anything weird or bad. "Thp hard stink
of this one is going to get esieVerytine
involved," said one friend.
AnotheragwM "As soca as she stood
up to say those words she changed her-
self from a sophisticated, mysterious
guiding intelligence and beauty next to
Hillary Clinton to the wife of a tarnished
Anthony Weiner."
They fear Huma learned the wrong
lesson from Hillary, given that Bill was a
roguish genius while Weiner's a creepy
loser.
"Bill Clinton was the greatest political
and policy mind of a generation," said
one. "Anthony is behaving similarly
without the chops or resume."
As often as Bill apologizai, he didn't
promise he would "never, ever" do it
again, s Weiner did.
"What people won't forgive is lying in
the apology," said the Clinton pal. "It has
to be sincere, and it sure as hell has to be
accurate."
— Maureen Dowd is a New York
Times columnist.
•
SHAREYOUR VIEWS: Send letters to the Editor and Opinion column proposals to Daily News Opinions, 9155 EstateThomas, St. Thomas. VI 00802 or [email protected]
EFTA01070332
Monday, July 29,2013
SPORTS
Team New Zealand defeats Italy
. in America's Cup challenger trials
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Emirates Team New Zealand
beat Italy's Luna Rossa by 3 minutes, 21 seconds in
their final meeting of the round-robins in the America's
Cup challenger trials Sunday on San Francisco Bay.
As the points leader in the round-robins, the Kiwis
had the choice of advancing straight to the Louis Vuitton
Cup final or picking their opponent for the semifinals.
Skipper Dean Barker said that while the New Zealanders
.
.
.
.
considered gettmg m more racmg tune, they've decided
to advance straight to the finals in order to continue
development of their 72-foot catamaran.
That leaves Luna Rossa to face Artemis Racing of
Sweden in the semifinals starting Aug. 6. Artemis only
recently launched its new boat and hasn't sailed in the
round-robins. The syndicate has been slowed by the
fatal capsize of its first boat on May 9.
The Louis Vuitton Cup finals begin Aug. 17, with the
winner advancing to face Oracle Team USA in the 34th
America's Cup starting Sept. 7.
Fie Photo by ASSOCIATED PRESS
Emirates Team New Zealand.
Team New Zealand had a slight lead at the start Sunday
and built its lead at every turning mark on the seven-leg
course. It went 5.0 against the Italians, including the
opening race that Italy boycotted due to a rules spat. -
In their four head-to-head matchups,the Kiwis wcrc so
dominant that the Italians twice wcrc officially ruled a
DNF -
did not finish -- because they crossed the finish
line more than five minutes behind Team New Zealand.
After the race, Tom Cruise and his son boarded Team
New Zealand's boat andwae gm:flank across the bay.
The Virgin islands Daily fsiewiCel
USVI men volleyball team
defeats Guadeloupe, 3-1,
for fifth place at CAZOVA
Daily News Staff
On Friday, the USVI was upset by
a previously winless Bahamas squad,
Aseah Thomas bad 23 points and
25-16, 19-25,t25-17, 26-24, in the
team captain Nayib Gonzalez added
quarterfinals of the tournament.
20 as they led the U.S. VirginIslandq:7; -Gonzalez .led the USVI' with a
junior men's volleyball team past match-high 20 points, followed-by
Thomas with 16 pdints.
Team captain Rajah! Moxey led
the Bahamas with 16 points, fol-
lowed by Kenton Dawkins with 10
points, three of which were blocks.
Justin Smith added nine points.
host Guadeloupe, 25-21, 20-25, 20-
25, 25-21, 15-9, on Saturday in the
fifth-place game at the ninth
CAZOVA Junior Men's
Championship i n Guadeloupe.
Thomas had seven aces and one
block, while Gonzalez's 20 points
came by way of kills in the match,
which lasted five.
Malick Frederic was Guadeloupe's
top scorer with 22 points, while
Yannis Biodore added 15 points and
Meidhy Tacita added 10.
V.I. Future Stars Baseball Showcase
Daily News Rows by THOMAS LAYER
Coaches Skip Sherman, right, of Genesee Community College in Batavia, N.Y., and Scott Dulin, o
• Fisher College in Boston, Mass.. holding a radar gun. scout baseball prospects at the Vi. Future
Stars' annual Summer Baseball Showcase on Saturday at Lionel Roberts Stadium on St. Thomas
There were also representatives from Southern Conneticut State University. thcrSen Francisco
Giants. St. Louis Cardinals and Colarado Rockies. The showcase, organized by V.1.-Future Stars
president Daren Canton gives local players the opportunity to display their athletic skills for college
and professional scouts.
Above, Malik
Mitchell, a
pitcher in his
second year at
Genesee
College,
throws a pitch
for scouts.
At left, Leroy
Simmonds, a
shortstop
and fomTer
student at St.
Croix Central
High School,
makes a play
to get a
runner out at
first base.
•
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