tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News February 23, 2023 7:00pm-8:00pm PST
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sovereignty, i want the united states out of the economic form and out of the paris climate accord and out of the u.n. and w.h.o. and we caught to make our own decisions. i am glad i never tell people to do as it relates to covid. y'all have a good time? [ applause ] >> thank you for coming. go to hannity.com. ♪ hi, everyone, i am laura ingraham. this is the "ingram angle," thank you for joining us tonight. alec murdaugh today admitted he's a liar. he's a liar but not a killer. >> i didn't shoot my wife or my sony time. ever. >> the attention of millions of americans across the country was riveted today as the once prominent attorney took the
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stand in his own double-murder trial accused of shooting his wife and his youngest son. he blew up his entire alibi when he said he lied about the last time he saw them alive. murdaugh told investigators he was sleeping during the time of the murders, and further that he had not been to family's dog kenal where the body was found. videos taken and taken minutes before the murder placed murdaugh at the scene. >> murdaugh, is that you at 8:44 p.m. on june 7th. the night maggie and paul were murdered? >> it is. >> were you in fact at the kenal the fight they were murdered? >> i was. >> why did you lie about the last time you saw maggie and
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paul? >> as my addiction evolved overtime, i would get into situations of circumstances where i would get paranoid thinking and it could be anything that triggered it. it may be a look somebody gives me or a tangle of once i told a lie. i told my family, and i had to keep lying. >> beyond that bomb shell admission, there was another major moment today that caught my attention. >> i am sorry to max, and paul. i would never intentionally do anything to hurt either one of them. >> hmm, he would never intentionally, intent do anything to hurt his wife and son. >> now, we are going to tell you
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why that statement is so significant. joining us now and i am delighted they are both with us, our criminal attorney a a aand a a aaand francis hake. what is sitting up here with the reference of "i would never intentionally"? >> i don't think we'll hear him confess with anything. he said he would never hurt his wife or kid. i think he was really using when he used the word intentional, he did a lot of things unintentionally because of his drug addiction and he lied to a lot of people. he lied in this investigation but he did not hurt his wife and kid. when you look at this guy's face on and off the stand, the emotion that i see is completely genuine. that's going to be a big grappling point for the
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jury. if somebody is that upset about losing his wife and kid in a horrific way, could he also be responsible for causing it? i think the jury is going to say no to that. >> hm, we are going to get to the body language aspect in a moment. francine, i want to stay to this reference of i would never intentionally harm my wife and son. >> yep. >> could this be setting up a lesser charge for the jury in a judge's instruction to the jury? >> well, maybe. it is possible that he could be trying to say there is some sort of man slaughter here. i don't think so, laura, what i think he was doing is what's called leaking. i don't think that was to quote him unintentional statement he made. i think under the duress of the moment, he said something unintentionally revealing, which is he didn't intentionally hurt them but that does not mean he
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didn't actually hurt them. it is not a confession but i disagree. i think it is easily assumed that he's upset of losing his lifestyle and upset about losing his career and upset about being humiliated and embarrassed in front of this community and his family dominated for decades and decades. i think that's where his emotion is coming from. i don't think it is coming from his killings of his wife and son. >> another moment today that i need to get both of your reactions on from murdaugh. watch. >> i stole money that didn't belong to me. i misled arthur badger to take that money and i was wrong. >> how many times did you practice that answer today? you have said it over and over again. >> i never prefaced that answer. you keep asking me these questions and i keep on using
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that answer. >> the prosecutor tried to rattle him up there. how many times did you practice that answer? i mean i thought he was as a defense witness and testifying out of his own behalf at a murder trial. i happen to agree with you, i think he actually performed really well. what about that response to the prosecutor? >> i think the prosecutor got out lawyered by this witness who happens to be a lawyer. there is no place for snark, honestly. in a case like this where you have two gruesome murders. this is the prosecutor's fault. he did keep repeating something. the jury was tired listening of the same question over and over again. he already apologized. we know he's a thief. we know he's a liar. we know he took down his law firm. let's move onto the real stuff. who killed maggie and paul so
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the prosecutor popped his own balloon on this one. >> francey, very quickly, your reaction to the same sound byte? admitting he's a liar but, you know, he's being called by the prosecutor for practicing and rehearsing his answers. >> well, i agree with jonna, murdaugh out lawyered the prosecutor here, he definitely practiced that answer. he gave it way too many times for it not to be practiced. >> all right, jonna and francen, great seeing you both. alec murdaugh claimed innocence on the stand today. he seems to be working very hard. again, it was practice. was it really a choreographed performance or a heartfelt expression or remorse for lying and saying i didn't do it. to help answer that question, we are joined by body language language, dr. lilian glass. dr. glass, you had so
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many experience in the trial context examining witnesses. here is how murdaugh describes finding his son's body. rp>> his head was where it wa can see his brain laying on the sidewalk - it was so bad. [ cries ] >> i was so mad. >> dr. glass, what are you seeing there? >> i see there is not a lot of authenticity. i think he practiced. it is not genuine. i don't feel those are genuine tools. they're maybe remorse for getting caught but in all honhonesty throughout the
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experience, you don't see a lot of tears, you see a lot of in-authenticity. >> was he trying to conjure up tears and the halting speech -- is he trying to make himself cry? i didn't see tears but i may have missed it. >> no, you didn't miss a thing. he's being very dramatic looking down. this is a great lawyer so he simply knows what to do, but it is not working. he's leaking out some of the truth. as we go further to watch, we see some sisignals sisig of deception. >> i want to play this next moment for you to react to, watch. >> uh-huh. >> did you take this gun or any gun like it and glow your son's brain out on june 7th or any day or any time? >> no, i did not. >> when people say -- i did not.
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that's a big warning sign. usually no, i didn't. no, i did not. i found in my experience that's always a red flag. >> so, he was kind of nodding yes while saying no, is that what you are saying? >> yes, that's one thing and hyper-articulate. again, he's bebeing definite and trying to make his point. when we think back of how his son appeared which was genuine. it is different from alex. >> there was a moment where he explains what he, himself, what alec murdaugh, did when we found his son's body. >> when i did, his phone popped
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outout, and -- grabbed him by belt loop. >> that's nothing like anyone would say. >> he got all emotional and all of a sudden he got back to normal. again, who ever grab anybody by the belt loops? this is your son, you grab him by the head or the upper extremity. it does not ring true in terms of what he's saying. you can see it in his face. >> dr. glass, is that trying to impart a sense of specificity onto the scene? that's why you would say that if you are being less than honest or lying? >> that's one of the signals of deception. it is too much information and he's getting too much details. that's not what
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people would say, oh my gosh, there is brains all over the place or it was blood or horrible. he's focusing on the belt loops and as he goes on further, he talks about the cell phone falling out of the belt loop or the belt area. and, it is just too much information. that's a big warning sign when it comes to deception. >> dr. glass, fascinating, thank you so much. >> and now paternity pete needs some love. after seeing the reception trump had in east palestine, he finally realized it is time to show up. did he really need to dress up? introducing pete, the builder. ♪ >> well, he could not build
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that, actually. it took leave it to pete 20 days to get to east palestine. that was only because he was shamed into appearing there, of course, we don't want to throw off his work life balance but -- >> the resilience and the resolve and the decency of this community as they have gone through both this disaster's immediate impact and the swirl of national and international and political attention that's come their way. their decency and resolves have been ins inspiring. i am here for the works and not politics. that's my train of thoughts. that's what i have to say about that. >> that caboose of thought just can't hold on. did he not know that if you want to be taken seriously then you can't look like you just stepped out of a village people's music video?
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that does not work. that w ww wwas -- "politico" ran a tough piece that was planted by pete. it was full of anonymous quotes of how great pete is. pete buttigieg taken a lot of bullets for the president on this. one senior democrat said. there was a moment that got a lot of attention today when one woman tried to ask pete a simple question. >> why did it take you an entire, 2.5 weeks to get here to respond to east palestine. will you apologize for the residents of the city. can we ask why it took him almost three weeks to get here? >> if you are the press secretary of the department of transportation, don't you think you should be able to ask questions from the american public? >> absolutely, i would like to do it without the camera on. >> can i ask why? >> i would like to hear it without the camera on. joining
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me now is that aggressive reporter you saw, savannah hernandez. good on you! that was pete's press secretary. now, she's fine when pete is on a bike and a bike lane telling us about transportation equity and all those sorts of things and electric buses. did she ever actually answer any of your questions? >> reporter: absolutely not. ag agagain, pete buttigieg runn away and the press secretary refused to take any questions is the perfect example of what this entire administration think about the american people. they run away and try to hide. when we ask for accountability and apologize for the slow response. the people here are some of the most kind and loving and it is a disgrace that the federal government abandoned and ignored them. i was here yesterday and the energy on the ground was incredible. the people just wanted a leader that would see
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them and care about them, that would tell them they were not forgotten as american citizens. today the only people that were on the ground were the approved prpress. i refused to ask prewritten questions and preapproved questions to the leaders we need to be holding accountable. again, they have completely ignored these people so shame on pete buttigieg and shame on his secretary for not answering questions on camera. she should read her job dedescription. >> i understand they had security to shoo you away from him, correct? >> reporter: absolutely, the security tried to tell me i could not film in a public area and then for the first time in the united states, i had to stand up in public. she ended up doing so and she spoke to another reporter. when those cameras turned off, she still
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answered no questions. >> for paternity pete to follow donald trump and east palestine, i almost feel sorry for him but then i don't. savannah, great job being there today. we really enjoyed it. thanks so much. what happens when the world's worst sales man is actually supposed to sail america's cause to the world? well, the world ends up rescinding you, my angle explains it, that's next.
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the high prize of self-loathing. that's the focus of tonight's angle. what does it take to be a great sales man? at a minimum, you need to believe in the product you are selling. how does america's chief sales man measures up? p>> preaching the same hate white supremacy. praises. lynching is pure - lynch is
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simply being black. >> which people want to do that still, joe? i mean if only america could sue him for defamation. biden's lieutenant would be named as codefendant. >> the president and the vice president ran on an ambitious agenda, systematic racism. >> we know we have work to do at home. that includes addressing and profounding equities and systematic racism. >> with those endorsements, what foreign leaders would not want to follow us? for over a year, the biden administration have been trying to rally the world to join the effort to sanction russia for his invasion of ukraine. >> we built a coalition of nation from the atlantic to the pacific. nato to the atlantic, japan to the pacific, i mean
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across the world. >> few countries outside of europe really care about what biden says or does about ukraine. they don't. "the washington post" today is reporting that the global divide on the ukraine war is deepening, not shrinking. the world is far from united on the issues raised by the ukraine war. the conflict is exposed to deep global divide and the limits of u.s. influence over rapidly shifting world orders. well, these facts are devastating. since the invasion, our ally india has allowed its trade to grow by 400% and nine countries in africa in the middle east visited the russian foreign administration. wait, 141 out of 191 u.n. country
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voted to condemn. wait a second. only 33 countries have imposed sanctions on russia and only a similar number are sending lethal aid to ukraine. well, no wonder putin's gdp is projected to be higher than ours next year. the post notes that one well respected survey estimates two-thirds of the world's population lives in countries that have not condemned russia's moved into ukraine. wait a second, was it mr. experience on the world's stage, joe biden, supposed to make things better for everyone? well, the truth is for decades, our elites advanced policies that have made china stronger and made china richer and more influential in the world. the same policies have
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made america weaker, and less influential in the world. on top of all of that, democrats and the left have spent a lot of time and energy arguing that our system was built on racism and on evil. about half the countr because they voted for trump is racist and evil. when they said all that and did all that, what did they think was going to happen? you do horrible damage to the strongest economy in the world where these idiotic trade policies and far-right christian nationalists and comparing parents to domestic terrorists, you keep repeating the nonsense that democracy is under attack and you expect the world is going to rally us? and say yeah, let's follow those guys into another war. iraq and afghanistan were such resounding successes. the foreign indian
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secretary conwell puts it this way. the rest of the world sees this as a european war. they do not see a global conflict or the ways presented by the west and there is south africa, we are their biggest investors and one would think that south africa is on our side in ukraine, right? well, after initially claiming to be neutral on the war, they're currently right now conducting military drills with both russia and china. this is after the biden administration sent a warning to south africa after we suspected one of their companies funneling ammunition to russia. the south african defend minister didn't bother replying to our warning. what does it say about the biden administration that they can't get their phone calls returned? now, to use a favorite word of
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biden's, look, resentment towards america is nothing new. what is new is that we now have a white house that resents america, too. when the u.s. have a strong economy and a powerful military and a proud america first president, the rest of the world is forced to pay attention whether they like us or not. unfortunately, now, they're just paying us lyft service and that's the angle. joining us now, and i am delighted, molly hemmingway and ed ryan, founder and andand ceo -- molly, china roll out a peace proposal tomorrow morning. my reaction to this is how sad is it that a brutal regime like china will be the leader in breaking the peace deal that we need, something that we probably could have done -- i don't know nine or 10
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months ago? >> it is just horrible to look at what a strategic blunder we have made through the way that we have handled this situation in ukraine. of course, it should have been statesmen and united states leading to a peaceful resolution. the last thing you you want is china which seeks to have such domination on the world's stage. it is not surprising because we were the ones who chose to do this. we were the ones who chose to put china and russia closer together. for 50 years we worked to keep them as far apart as possible. because of the way we have done this, this debacle, we h hhave driven them together a weaken our positions globally. this is not a surprising result but it is a sat one. >> now, ned, there was a moment from antony blinken where he still clinging to this idea
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after everything has happened and all these countries aligned against us, western europe is pretty much with us on ukraine, although they're not funding much. he's still clinging to this idea of the world's order. watch this. >> we are not dividing into ididealogi ididecal blocking. our challenge now is to make sure that all countries help put those rules in place and come together in that way. that's fundamentally what this is about. >> ned, the rules based international order. how does he say it with a straight face given what india had done and south africa, egypt and saudi arabia and all those countries
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acted in their own self-interest. >> that's a dangerous and naive and foolish ideology. every nation is looking out for its own interest. apparently, we in the united states forgotten. they are supposed to look at the interests of your nation first and last. we completely lost sight of that. in doing that because of the weakness we have shown on the international stage, we are looking at the end of the united states preeminent on the national stage, we have allowed china and as molly mentioned by our own choices. we allowed china to step into this void. if they broke their peace, they're going to cut us out and relegate us to a second class power all because of the decisions we have made. we are on our current leadership and they are refusing to acknowledge the reality of human nature and
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how the world has always worked. if we continue to do this, it is not going to end well for us. >> molly, is this an important moment for 2024 candidates for the republican party. i think we can imagine what nikki haley thinks about this and the war in ukraine. for ron desantis and donald trump and others who have a point of view, is this going to set us apart from the rest? >> absolutely. in washington, d.c. you have leaders who are pushing for this failed policy that failed in iraq and after scan and failing with much worse consequences in the war in ukraine. the american people and republican voters want a foreign policy based on our national interests. they want a strong military that defends our interests and minds our own business. when we are ready to get involved, they don't want us to depleting our resources.
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anyone who wants to be on a big player will have to speak to what the american people want much less than joe biden and sadly what mitch mcconnell wants. >> the bush era is over. get the headline finally. >> a special thursday folly. a former biden official is charged. ramon has it all, next. l treatments you need, all under one roof, right nearby. so we can bring more life to your smile... and more smile to your life... affordably. new patients without insurance can get a free complete exam and x-rays, and 20 percent off treatment plans. schedule your appointment today.
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>> sam was already charged of stealing ladies' bags and he appeared in minneapolis court and now living in houston. thompson alleges she lost her bag in 2018 and now she believes brinton had worn her clothes, exclusive design and she notified the authorities. i guess he got his clothing on baggage claim. now, do you remember, laura, it got me thinking, when you lost back in 2020 of that bag in l.a.x. we have come across a few disturbing images. do you recognize this outfit? >> okay. wait a second. >> the zipper, look -- there is a similarity. >> i was wondering where that went. >> look at that. the butterfly.
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>> he busted into your bag or dolly park. >> raymond, i was wondering where those dresses went. i am calling authorities right now, hello? okay. that's a scandal. >> this points to character when you are hiring people to work at the upper echelon at your administration, i guess clothes does not always make the man. i will leave it there. >> they were more interested in fur. >> ratings have been sinking for a long time. in a new nba, charles barkley, who works for the company that owns cnn is in talks to host the show, "gayle king," this will work. >> well, i love this. in the interview, barkley says i want to help the company because obviously it is a show right now. anything i can do to help.
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>> joy tried and hugley and aalec aa -- it is a different set of muscles and we'll see if charles and gayle can do it together. can gayle just do it alone? >> raymond -- did john stewart hosted the show on cnn. >> and don lemon had to pay where he made that comment about women not being in their prime. >> i wonder how lemon -- ladies in their prime for sensitivity training. >> repeat after me. >> i have no shame in talking about the fact that i am going on 60 and the experience of hot
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flashes and whether you take hormones or you know, how do you continue to feel sexual and vibrant? there is no shame in my menopause game. i am alive. >> speak it louder, really loud. i am worth it. >> well, you know, sorry, what can men do leaving here? be better. be better. >> be better. >> i love that. just be better. >> you don't know what to do in these situations and how to react. i was just trying to, you know -- >> don seems to be getting better. he does seem to be progressive. i think this is going to end with lemon doing the full oprah. gayle king and charles barkley can feature it on their new show, we'll see.
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>> i maintain that the turtle neck cuts off the oxygen to his brain and he didn't know what he was saying. those can be very constricting. >> well, at least sam brinton was not chasing his bag. there was a moment many missed just before joe biden took his trip to ukraine, he tried to enjoy a quiet dinner in d.c. when this happened. >> president biden, i hate to bother you, we need to end this war in ukraine. i hate to bother you but people are dying. >> your thoughts on this, laura? i don't like this ambushing of people? >> at least we know that china is ending the war. they'll be pushing the peace plan tomorrow morning. how ironic is that from
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china? >> when you have the reflux problem, the last thing you want to do is disturb him while he's chewing on his food. he could have choked on a lamb chop or something and then where would ukraine be? >> don't joke about that. i am still upset about my dresses. doctors performing trans surgery on kids are forced to fight back. that's what my next guest is doing. chloe cole will tell us about it next.
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you're probably going to want to start running. the next generation 10g network, only from xfinity. one giant leap for mankind. > it is well-known that 80 even up to 85% of children who experience gender. >> well, this is from one of finland's leading expert on pediatric gender care. it should be a wake up call to all of america. >> let's face it. the demonic freaks who are pushing kids into
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life-altering procedures, they don't care that 85% of them would grow out of their asphyxiation. that's why these freaks want to push these surgeries onto kids at a younger and younger age. get them young and the damage is done. but, i want to repeat what that doctor said, 85% of kids with this gender of dysphoria feeling differently when they reach puberty. here in the united states, of brainwashing, it happens to my next guest who under went a double masectomy. today, she finally decides to fight back, filing a lawsuit against kaiser and the doctors performed a sex change experiment on her. chloe cole joins me now along with her
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attorney, dylan. what's your message top parents out there who may have been told their son or daughter has gender dysphoria? >> thank you, laura for having me. p>> unfortunately, you haveo against the advice of your doctor right now and keep them away from this ideology and keeping them away from this experimentation and also letting them know that you love them and staying involved in their life aes much as you can. >> the care decision always rests with the patient and their parents. in every case, we respect their patients and their family informed decisions of their personal health. is that really the case? >> well, that's the lie, laura.
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informed is the trick word there. it is impossible to any patient who goes to get care at kaiser because kaiser is not telling the whole story. like chloe, they are pushing surgeries on children at younger age. it is big business. they're signing up children for a lifetime of medical care and treatment and a lifetime of regret for most of them as you just mentioned from that expert in finland. that's what studies show. it is selling this mimicry. it is pushing drugs on children that puberty blockers are reversible. they are not. it is package of lies and frankly, it is impossible to give them consents under these circumstances. we are holding kaisers and
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physicians and medical professionals who did this to chloe liable. kaiser think twice before doing this to other children. >> well. harmeet -- it is like the cigarette company, they knew what they were doing but they pushed it anyway for money and branding and so forth. chloe, to your personal case, you get a double masectomy at age 16 -- now, what do you do? what are you doing now for your own care? >> i mean i have tried to reach out all my doctors got me into the situation in the first place and the gender specialist who referred me to the surgeon told me that the regret and this failed transition is another part of my gender journey. after
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those three circles, right? >> laura: how often do you think she actually thinks about a venn diagram? about as much as she thinks of astronauts, or outer space? that's it for us tonight. remember, set your dvr so you always stay connected with us. remember, it is america now and forever. graciously. greg gutfeld is next. ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ >> kat: happy thursday, everybody! i'm kat, but you can call me ms. timpf if you're nasty. [laughter] let's talk about the supreme court, and a law called section 230.
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