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Michael Jackson's dermatologist dies; wife stabbed for talking on phone?

  • Oct 23, 2015
  • Oct 23, 2015 Updated Nov 2, 2015

Odd and unusual news from the West

Dermatologist for Michael Jackson, other stars, dies

LOS ANGELES — Dr. Arnold Klein once said, "Put me next to a patient, give me a needle and I'm really happy."

To which the man once known as Hollywood's "Dermatologist to the Stars" might have added: "Make the patient Michael Jackson and I'll be even happier."

Klein, who died Thursday in a Rancho Mirage hospital at 70, was a pioneer in the use of Botox and other injectable substances to improve personal appearance. For years, however, he was better known to the public as one of Jackson's closest friends.

It was a relationship that helped cement the doctor's reputation as the go-to guy for stars such as Elizabeth Taylor, Carrie Fisher and others who wanted work to make them look younger.

Jackson's friendship would ultimately prove a curse for Klein after the King of Pop died of a drug overdose administered by another physician in 2009, and it was revealed that Klein had been regularly injecting Jackson with the powerful painkiller Demerol.

An investigation found no trace of that drug in Jackson's body when he died and Klein was not implicated in the death, but the revelation permanently stained his reputation as one of Los Angeles' most prominent celebrity physicians.

So much so that Klein had largely fallen off the paparazzi and gossip tabloid radar until he died.

No cause of death was given by the Riverside County coroner's office, and no investigation was planned.

Klein's celebrity client roster once included entertainers such as Dolly Parton and Cher, powerful Hollywood executives, wealthy Beverly Hills socialites and even international royalty.

Klein's favorite patient was clearly Jackson.

He called the entertainer "my best friend" in a 2011 interview with The Associated Press, adding that he had joined Jackson and Jackson's children in celebrating the entertainer's last Christmas in 2008.

Rumors persisted over the years that Klein had fathered two of Jackson's three children with Debbie Rowe, a nurse who had worked for Klein and who had married Jackson. Klein denied it.

Klein met Jackson in 1983 when Klein treated him for a skin rash. He quickly became the entertainer's regular dermatologist, treating him for ailments that included the skin disease vitiligo that causes a patchy whitening of the skin.

Conrad Murray, another doctor who had been providing the powerful anesthetic propofol to help Jackson sleep, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death.

During Murray's trial it was revealed that Klein often provided Jackson with Demerol to ease pain during his friend's treatments.

Klein told The Associated Press in 2011 that the publicity drove away some of his international clients and political bigwigs who didn't want photographers to see them entering his Beverly Hills clinic. But he insisted his Hollywood clientele stood by him. Fisher for one agreed.

The actress told the AP at the time that Klein was a brilliant and ethical doctor who never would have misused drugs and who helped her immensely with her appearance and self-esteem.

"It's like he's a painter but the brush is a needle," she said at the time. She was traveling Friday and couldn't be reached for comment.

Attorney Garo Ghazarian, who represented Klein during the Jackson death investigation, called Klein a larger than life figure who was engaging, outgoing, candid and funny.

"In my line of work in representing different types of clients I respect all of them and their right to representation, but I don't necessary like each and every one of them," the criminal defense attorney said. "But I really liked Dr. Klein. I really liked him."

Soon after the investigation Klein filed for bankruptcy and blamed it on theft and fraud by former employees. They denied it, saying it was the doctor's own profligate spending that helped lead to his financial woes.

At one time Klein owned huge homes in Palm Springs, Laguna Beach and Beverly Hills, drove expensive cars and sported pricey jewelry.

At the time of his death, he still maintained a clinic in Beverly Hills. It was closed Friday.

In a video from last year that's posted on his website, Klein demonstrates a successful procedure on a patient to smooth out the wrinkles and improve the look of her face.

"What you want is a person not to look done but to look natural and to look good and better and rested," he said.

He also reiterated what he told the AP in 2011: "All I'm trying to do is be the best doctor I can."

Information on survivors was not immediately available.

___

AP Entertainment Writer Lynn Elber contributed to this report.

California court upholds fake Rockefeller murder conviction

LOS ANGELES — A California appeals court has upheld the first-degree murder conviction of a con man who posed as an heir to the Rockefeller fortune.

Christian Gerhartsreiter is serving 27 years to life for the 1985 killing of a San Marino man — John Sohus — whose remains were found buried in the victim's backyard nearly a decade later.

City News Service says on Friday, an appellate panel rejected a defense argument that there wasn't enough evidence to support the jury's finding of premeditation.

Gerhartsreiter, a social climber who also claimed to be an English nobleman and a Hollywood producer, was charged with the cold-case killing in 2011.

At the time, he was behind bars in Massachusetts for kidnapping his own daughter in a custody dispute.

No injuries after 2 aircraft collide near Calif./Nevada line

LAS VEGAS — Authorities say no injuries have been reported after two aircraft that departed from an airport in Henderson apparently collided mid-air near the California/Nevada state line.

Clark County firefighters say they received reports of the incident at about 10:20 a.m. on Friday.

Clark County Deputy Fire Chief Jeff Buchanan says one plane with two people on board returned to the Henderson Executive Airport. He said the other had one person aboard and was forced to land in a dry lake bed in California's San Bernardino County.

Buchanan said there was no fire, but the plane that landed in California was leaking fuel and both had "significant" damage. It wasn't immediately known where the two planes were headed.

Officials from the Federal Aviation Administration didn't respond to requests for comment on Friday.

Drowning claimed life of man found buried in mud-covered car

LOS ANGELES — A man who was found in a minivan buried under feet of mud in Southern California after a flash flood died of drowning.

The Los Angeles County coroner's office says an autopsy concluded the death of 49-year-old Robert Rasmussen was an accident.

Rasmussen was housesitting for his mother in the Mojave Desert community northeast of Los Angeles when the minivan was swept off a road into a drainage basin during a storm in Palmdale on Oct. 15.

Some residents reported seeing a vehicle disappearing in the flood but the city manager has said nobody was reported missing during the storm.

The minivan was dug out of 6 feet of mud on Tuesday.

Police: University student sold drugs to pay for books

FLAGSTAFF — Police at Northern Arizona University are investigating a student who they suspect of selling cocaine on campus.

University police arrested 18-year-old Francisco Curiel last month on suspicion of narcotics sales and possession of drug paraphernalia. Authorities say they were tipped off by one of his roommates.

Curiel has not been charged formally with a crime.

NAU spokeswoman Cindy Brown said Friday that police are awaiting lab results.

A search of Curiel's dorm turned up two bags of white powder, and plastic tubes and straws that police suspect had cocaine residue.

A police report says Curiel got drugs from friends in Tucson who worked with cartel members.

Curiel was released from jail on his own recognizance.

It's unclear whether he has an attorney. A phone listing for Curiel couldn't immediately be found.

___

This story has been corrected to show that only one student was arrested on suspicion of selling drugs.

Federal report: Wild horse buyer sold mustangs for slaughter

DENVER (AP) — A federal investigation has determined that a Colorado livestock hauler sent about 1,700 wild horses to slaughterhouses after buying them through a Bureau of Land Management program that's supposed to provide the animals with good homes.

The Department of the Interior's Office of Inspector General released a report Friday saying that between 2008 and 2012, La Jara rancher and livestock hauler Tom Davis bought 1,794 horses from the BLM's Wild Horse and Burro Program, which manages tens of thousands of mustangs that roam the West.

The Denver Post reports (http://goo.gl/4vmW2D ) that when investigators asked Davis how many of the horses he bought had been re-sold for slaughter, he told them, "Probably close to all of them."

Wild horses are protected under federal law, and selling them for slaughter is illegal.

___

Information from: The Denver Post, http://www.denverpost.com

California students hospitalized after drug overdose

PINOLE, Calif. — Authorities say five suburban San Francisco high school students were hospitalized after overdosing on a prescription drug used to treat anxiety, while authorities warn about tainted medication being sold on the streets.

KNTV reports that two other students were involved in the incident Thursday. All seven were suspended from Pinole Valley High School.

West Contra Costa School District spokesman Marcus Walton says the Pinole Valley students were seen stumbling at lunchtime Thursday. Teachers noticed the students were acting as if they were intoxicated, Walton said. School officials called for an ambulance and police.

Five students were taken to the hospital, and two were released to their parents, Walton said. Their conditions were not available Friday.

Meanwhile, the San Francisco Department of Public Health is warning people not to purchase Xanax on the street because the fake pills in circulation contain fentanyl, an extremely potent, short-acting opioid that can cause death.

Last week, three people between the ages of 20-40 years old were hospitalized after taking a pill inscribed and sold as Xanax and purchased on the street. All three suffered complications of opioid overdose, including sedation, weakness in extremities, muscle breakdown that can lead to kidney damage, and fluid in lungs, health department officials said.

A fourth person, who had the same pill, was found dead.

"We know there is a dangerous counterfeit drug being sold on the street as 'Xanax,' and people should be very careful and avoid the risk of overdose and death," Health Officer Dr. Tomás J. Aragón said. "Under no circumstances should you accept medication from someone else, or purchase prescription medicine on the street."

The Health Department alerted physicians in San Francisco to the problem Thursday.

It was not known if the Pinole students purchased the drugs in San Francisco. A Contra Costa County Health Services spokeswoman said Friday the department did not receive any reports about fake Xanax pills. However, the spokeswoman said the department is advising the public not to take any medication that is not theirs or that is purchased on the street.

The incident comes just days after five students in Marin County, north of San Francisco, were sent to the hospital for overdosing on over-the-counter cough medication.

___

Information from: KNTV-TV.

Woman sues officer who shared explicit photos from her phone

SAN FRANCISCO — A woman who says an officer secretly copied explicit photos from her phone during a traffic stop is suing the California Highway Patrol, claiming a violation of her civil rights and invasion of privacy, a lawsuit said.

Natalie Sramek sued former Officer Sean Harrington and the CHP in federal court, saying he had no cause to search her phone when he stopped her on suspicion of drunken driving last August, the Oakland Tribune reported Thursday.

Harrington resigned after prosecutors charged him a year ago with two counts of felony computer theft for stealing photos from women's cellphones. He pleaded no contest to the charges and was sentenced to probation and violence prevention classes.

The lawsuit also names CHP Commissioner Joseph Farrow and Officer Robert Hazelwood as defendants. Prosecutors declined to charge Hazelwood, who received photos from Harrington via text messages.

Officials from the agency were not immediately available for comment Friday.

Harrington pulled over Sramek on a freeway in suburban San Ramon on suspicion of drunken driving Aug. 29. He got the passcode to her phone by saying he would help her call a friend, according to the lawsuit.

He then looked through her photos and sent at least six images of Sramek in "various states of undress" to himself, the newspaper reported.

"The photos were then immediately distributed, shared, and offensively discussed with at least one other CHP Officer (Robert Hazelwood)," the suit says.

Harrington apologized after his court appearance in January.

"I apologize to my family, my wife, my friends. I apologize to officers everywhere, especially to the two women involved," he said. "I'm trying to put this behind me and move forward from this. I hope now everyone else can, too."

Sramek is suing over violation of her Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights, civil theft and invasion of privacy, among other claims.

Her attorney, Richard Madsen Jr., did not immediately return a message from The Associated Press on Friday.

___

Information from: The Oakland Tribune, http://www.oaklandtribune.com

Man accused of stabbing wife for talking on phone

BRIGHAM CITY, Utah (AP) — A 20-year-old Utah man accused of fatally stabbing his 19-year-old ex-wife because she ignored him has been ordered to stand trial for murder.

Spencer Gerlach of Perry got angry when his ex-wife stayed on the phone making weekend plans with another man after he arrived at her new apartment for a visit with their toddler daughter, prosecutors said Thursday during an evidence hearing.

Knowing that money was tight since the divorce a month before, Gerlach brought a pizza on April 15 that he hoped to share with his ex-wife and work on their relationship, Brigham City police detective Chad Panter testified. Keltsie Gerlach ignored her ex-husband.

"I was extremely frustrated and my heart began to beat faster than it ever had in my life," Gerlach wrote in a statement to police, according to the Deseret News (http://bit.ly/1W96iYj ).

He walked to his car and got a combat-style knife he kept there for self-defense, and then hesitated.

"I went into the bathroom to try to calm my rage," Spencer Gerlach told police.

After a moment, he left the bathroom, put the 15-month-old girl in her crib and shut the door.

He turned to his ex-wife and stabbed her in the stomach. She didn't have time to react, he told police, as he stabbed her more than a dozen times in her back, buttocks and neck.

After she was dead, he called police, according to prosecutors who played the recording of the 911 call during Thursday's hearing.

"I just murdered my wife and my baby is here," he told a dispatcher, sounding slightly breathless. "I stabbed her with a knife."

Spencer Gerlach has pleaded not guilty in the case. He showed little emotion during Thursday's hearing, but appeared briefly troubled as the details of his ex-wife's wounds were read.

His lawyer Bernard Allen asked a judge to toss out a domestic violence in the presence of a child charge, arguing that his client tried to shield his daughter from the violence by putting her in the other room.

Judge Brandon Maynard refused, saying the baby was less than 35 feet away and could have heard the slaying through the apartment's thin doors.

He ordered Spencer Gerlach to stand trial on both charges. He is due back in court Nov. 2.

Brigham City is located about 60 miles north of Salt Lake City.

__

This story has been corrected to show the defendant has pleaded not guilty. A previous version indicated he was set to enter a plea Nov. 2.

___

Information from: Deseret News, http://www.deseretnews.com

Prosecutors: Man sprayed graffiti on prehistoric carving

FRESNO, Calif. — A man in Central California is charged with spraying graffiti on a prehistoric rock carving of a bighorn sheep in a national forest to get revenge on his boss, federal prosecutors said Friday.

Archaeologists with the U.S. Forest Service discovered a black substance sprayed on Rabbit Island, a rocky outcropping in the Sequoia National Forest in the mountains east of Bakersfield. The area was once home to the Tubatulabal Indians.

The graffiti included a phone number sprayed on the rocks inviting people call for a sex act. Investigators dialed the number leading them to a Bakersfield business and a disgruntled employee, 58-year-old Christopher James Harp, according to the arrest warrant filed by Special Agent Brian Adams with the U.S. Forest Service. Harp admitted to the graffiti, Adams says.

The graffiti stretching 100 yards long also included vulgar pictures. It damaged a prehistoric petroglyph of a bighorn sheep on the face of a large boulder. Investigators later determined that the thick, black spray was from an aerosol can of asphalt sealer.

Harp told investigators he wanted revenge against his boss, who "talked to him like a child," court papers say, adding that Harp said he was drunk at the time, and he didn't know the rocks had archaeological value.

Harp pleaded not guilty to one count of defacing public land. Court records show that he has been placed in a facility for substance abuse and mental health treatment. If convicted, Harp could be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison and be fined $250,000, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Sacramento says.

Harp or his attorney, Janet Bateman, could not be immediately reached to comment on the charge.

Did school district boss fake credentials?

MORA, N.M. — Mora's school superintendent has been placed on paid administrative leave while New Mexico officials investigate allegations that he fabricated his resume to get his $100,000-a-year job.

The school board voted 4-0 Thursday to put Charles Trujillo on leave pending the outcome of the state Public Education Department's probe.

The Santa Fe New Mexican reports allegations recently surfaced that Trujillo fabricated his resume with the help of others in order to obtain an administrative license.

The 43-year-old Trujillo was hired in May after he served a brief stint as an assistant superintendent in the Pecos school district.

He previously served as chief of the Public Education Department's Licensure Bureau, which is responsible for vetting the qualifications and issuing licenses to teachers, administrators and other instructional personnel in New Mexico.

Lost Washington hiker walks 16 miles overnight to safety

ELLENSBURG, Wash. — Kittitas County authorities say a hiker missing in the Teanaway area of central Washington walked 16 miles overnight to safety.

The Yakima Herald reports 25-year-old Sarah Brandabur of Mercer Island had been trying to hike to Ingalls Lake with a friend on Wednesday, but continued on alone after the friend got tired.

The Kittitas County sheriff's office says search and rescue volunteers were just starting to look for Brandabur on Thursday when a resident called to say she had walked to their home overnight. Their home is about 16 miles from where the searchers were looking and where her footprints had been spotted.

Temperatures had dropped to the mid-20s overnight and Brandabur had no overnight gear. The sheriff's office reports she was cold and tired, but not injured.

___

Information from: Yakima Herald-Republic, http://www.yakimaherald.com

Major drug tunnel found on US-Mexico border in California

SAN DIEGO — Authorities seized 12 tons of marijuana and arrested 22 people after discovering one of the longest cross-border tunnels between the U.S. and Mexico, officials said Thursday.

The passage connecting warehouses in San Diego and Tijuana, Mexico, was about 2,400 feet long and 30 feet deep. It was lit, ventilated and equipped with a rail system — hallmarks of the most sophisticated tunnels found along the border.

Near-simultaneous police stings on Wednesday resulted in six arrests in San Diego and 16 in Mexico. Authorities recovered two tons of marijuana in the U.S. and 10 tons in Mexico.

U.S. authorities said smugglers tried to move the first load of drugs through the tunnel on Wednesday but that nothing got through undetected.

The sting came after an undercover agent for U.S. Homeland Security Investigations agreed to provide the drug smugglers with drivers and use of a warehouse in exchange for a $10,000 payment for each truckload of drugs moved, according to a probable cause statement.

The discovery demonstrates the enduring appeal of tunnels to smugglers, despite the significant time and money required to build one. Dozens of tunnels have been found along the U.S.-Mexico border in recent years, some equipped with hydraulic lifts and electric rail cars.

"We see a super tunnel open for business once every year or so," said U.S. Attorney Laura Duffy. "Just when they think they're ready to move, we put it out of business. We continue to make good on our promise to relentlessly pursue and shut down any tunnel as soon as it opens."

The San Diego-Tijuana region is popular because its clay-like soil is relatively easy to dig with shovels and pneumatic tools, and both sides of the border have warehouses that provide cover for trucks and heavy equipment.

It was unclear which drug trafficking organization orchestrated the latest passage but the region is largely controlled by Mexico's Sinaloa cartel, whose leader Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman escaped from a maximum-security prison in Mexico in July through an elaborate tunnel.

Mexican federal police said in a news release that those arrested on suspicion of drug trafficking told authorities that they had ties to a criminal group that operates in the state of Jalisco — an apparent reference to the Jalisco New Generation cartel, which controls that part of western Mexico.

The Mexican suspects were caught off-guard when authorities arrived at the Tijuana warehouse with a search warrant, police said. No shots were fired.

The drugs found were wrapped in 873 packages covered with plastic and tape.

On the U.S. side, the tunnel entry point in a warehouse near the Otay Mesa border crossing had no stairs or ladder. Duffy said smugglers were believed to be using pulleys.

Dave Shaw, head of Homeland Security Investigations in San Diego, said traffic to and from the San Diego warehouse was unusually heavy before the sting. The agency began investigating in May, he said.

"It almost looked like they filled it with junk to look like they were busy," Shaw said.

Isaias Enriquez, 53, and Isidro Silva, 27, both of Tijuana, were charged with conspiracy in U.S. federal court. Four others were to be charged in state court.

Enriquez agreed in recorded conversations to pay the undercover agent $10,000 a truckload to provide a second warehouse and drivers, according to the probable cause statement. Drugs were to go there from the warehouse on the border in San Diego.

Two agents unloaded boxes containing 249 packages of pot at the second warehouse on Wednesday, and one met later with Enriquez and Silva at a San Diego restaurant to arrange another shipment, the document said.

Alaska tribal members get back totem pole taken by actor

HONOLULU — A stolen totem pole that went from the garden decor of two golden-age Hollywood actors to the basement of a Hawaii museum has been returned to Alaska tribal members.

Screen legend John Barrymore was traveling along the Alaska coast by yacht and directed crew members to take the totem pole from an unoccupied village in 1931, said University of Alaska Anchorage professor Steve Langdon, who has long researched the object. They sawed it in three pieces.

Barrymore, star of "Grand Hotel" and grandfather of actress Drew Barrymore, displayed the pole in the garden of his California estate.

After Barrymore's death, actor Vincent Price, known for horror flicks such as "House of Wax," and his wife bought the item and also used it as a yard decoration. The couple donated it to the Honolulu Museum of Art in 1981.

Langdon's interest in the piece came from a visit to an Alaska museum where he saw a photo of Price standing next to the approximately 40-foot-tall pole. "It was totally out of place," he recalled. "Here's this recognizable Hollywood figure in a backyard estate with a totem pole ... that was surrounded by cactus."

Langdon learned the pole was used for burials, and that there were remains of a man inside before Barrymore had it erected at his home. Langdon does not know what happened to the remains after they were removed from the pole.

Museum officials didn't know the pole was stolen. With permission from tribal leaders, Langdon came to Honolulu in 2013 to examine the pole, setting into motion a repatriation process funded by the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

On Thursday, seven Tlingit tribal members who traveled to Honolulu from the southeast village of Klawock wore lei, sang somber songs, handed out gifts and thanked Hawaii for taking good care of the pole.

"We too also are ocean people," said Jonathan Rowan, master carver and cultural educator. "We live on an island also."

With the scent of cedar wafting in the air, his daughter Eva Rowan brushed three feathers along the pole pieces bearing carved images of a killer whale, a raven, an eagle and a wolf.

"It gives my heart great peace that my ancestors can go home," she said. "I feel my father's people here. I feel my grandfather's people here, giving us strength right now."

Only the top section of the pole was displayed briefly in the museum, and the pole spent most of its years in Honolulu in a climate-controlled basement.

"I take some comfort in the fact that we've taken good care of it," said Stephan Jost, the museum's director.

It was among more than 100 totem poles that once stood in the old village of Tuxecan on Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, which was inhabited by the Tlingit people, the museum said.

Of the original Tuxecan poles, only two remain, both in Klawock, the village of 800 people where the tribe moved, according to the museum.

The pieces were cradled in packing foam in wooden crates that museum workers sealed after the ceremony. The pole will leave the museum Friday, and set sail for Alaska on Tuesday.

___

This story has been corrected to show Klawock has a population of 800, not 80.

___

Follow Jennifer Sinco Kelleher at http://www.twitter.com/JenHapa .

Mormon essay address history of women in the priesthood

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The Mormon Church is issuing a new essay addressing the sensitive topic of women in the priesthood, clarifying that although women were allowed to give healing blessings in the early days they were never allowed to be priesthood holders.

The article, posted online Friday, comes during a time when some women in the faith are pushing for the ordination of women.

An accompanying article also posted online Friday says that religion's belief in the Heavenly Mother is a cherished one.

The essays complete a series of 13 articles published in the last two years addressing sensitive aspects of the religion's doctrine or history.

The series is part of a larger push by the Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for transparency over secrecy when it comes to its history and beliefs.

Search suspended for black bear in deadly attack

KALISPELL, Mont.— Montana wildlife officials have suspended their efforts to trap a black bear that attacked an 85-year-old Kalispell-area woman, causing fatal injuries.

However, the investigation into the Sept. 27 attack continues, according to Fish, Wildlife and Parks.

Barbara Paschke had been providing feed to bears when she was attacked in her home, FWP officials said. She died from her injuries on Oct. 1. Paschke had been cited in 2012 for feeding bears, which is prohibited under state law. That year, a sow and two cubs were captured and euthanized, Fish Wildlife and Parks bear specialist Eric Wenum said.

Investigators captured and euthanized two bears following the attack on Paschke. The female bears were determined not to have been involved in the fatal attack, but investigators say they were being fed and had become conditioned to humans. DNA tests determined one of the bears was the sister of the offending bear.

Wenum said the male bear likely entered the house after being conditioned to seek food there but did not appear to have targeted Paschke.

"I'm sure he was in a very agitated state because he was trapped in a house and didn't know how to get out," Wenum told the Daily Inter Lake. The bear caused extensive damage before finally escaping through a window.

Paschke's obituary said she had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2009, "which altered her perspective on how to preserve wildlife wisely and safely."

Wenum said the agency's efforts to trap the offending bear have apparently been complicated by someone else who continues to feed the animal.

"We don't have definitive proof there, but based on the sheer lack of activity at the site ... I'm very surprised we haven't had the target bear return to the site, other than one time, so I suspect he's being fed someplace else," Wenum said.

Fish, Wildlife and Parks is asking anyone who knows that bears are being fed in the Ashley Lake area to contact the agency.

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April 6 recap: Tucson news you may have missed today

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