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tv   Lockup Boston  MSNBC  March 16, 2012 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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abandonment are unchanged. i'm john seigenthaler. there are two million people behind bars in america. we open the gates, lockup. jail is hell. jail is hell. >> willie! can you come to the door, sir? >> a lot of the mental state hospitals have closed down and the only options to the police agencies are bring them to the jails. >> dirty. shower is dirty, toilet dirty, floor dirty, pointblank, dirty. >> anything can happen at any given time at any moment, very fast, very quick. >> head psz up, let's go.
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head's up. >> i'm not looking for shanks, i happened to stumble upon this. >> you never know what to expect all we do all day is sit like a time bomb waiting for something to happen. >> this is as close to living hell as i think i ever want to come. >> when someone breaks the law there is a distinct difference between going to prison and jail. prison is for convicted felon, many with long term sentences. jail is where suspects spend a short time either while waiting for trial or before being transfer to the another facility. it's also where convicts serve short sentences. but any time behind bars can have a lasting impact. in this hour of lockup we'll take you inside the main jail system in miami known as miami dade corrections. >> the towers over beaches, luxury cruise ships, no wonder it's a popular vacation spot,
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also a hot bet of illicit drug activity generate as constant flow of mep and women in what has become the sixth largest jail in america. miami dade corrections is made up of five facilities located throughout the city. housing nearly 7000 inmates. every year, approximately 100,000 men and women are processed in miami dade. many arrive here at the main jail, also known as the pretrial detention center. >> main jail is considered the hub because it's next to the court building. and all the inmates that go to court are staged at the pretrial detention center. we have a bridge to the courthouse. >> listen up, gentlemen. listen for your name. >> built in 1959, the detention center is the oldest of the miami dade facilities and also the busiest. in fact, for the officers own safety, the jail has asked that we only reveal their last names.
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>> biggest is we don't know what we're facing until they come through the door. we don't know if the person is very combative, if they are high on drugs, going to come through and fight a bunch of people. >> had superman come in, superman suit. he was upset, visibly upset because they took his cape. fortunately we had enough officers with experience to talk with him and different fuss the situation. >> after being checked for weapons and contraband, inmates wait in a holding cell. many of the inmates come to the jail as a result of using or selling drugs. >> we have a major drug problem, and that is where most of the cases consist of. it's the reason why the jail system is so overcrowded. >> yeah take the cuffs off. >> i don't do drugs every day, i don't smoke crack every day but when i do, i go on a binge. >> 39-year-old alfonso young is being booked on robbery charges. >> i know the procedures.
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back again. i done been here about 20 times. and majority of the time because i got hooked on drugs. and by me being hooked on drugs, that cause me to do petty crimes. hey officer. are you ready to fingerprint me? >> that is what you will do now. >> inmates are fingerprinted then allowed to make one phone call. >> i spent the night with a friend. a female, though. i'm so tired of depressing my mama, everybody else in my family is ambitious, got it going on i'm the only one. so they always watching me, waiting to see what is my next move going to be because they don't want me to always end up back here. >> as part of the booking process, inmates must be seen by a nurse for a physical and mental evaluation. >> any drug use? what kind of drugs you use?
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>> crack cocaine. prozac. that is for depression. >> once the evaluation is completed, the processing department creates id's and classifies the inmates as to where they will be sent within the jail. because alfonso takes prozac for depression, he will be housed on the 8th floor, one of the three floors dedicated to psychiatric care. >> then i will be here until court. >> alfonso young was charged with petty theft and spent one day in jail before being released. >> this is the maximum security unit at the jail whereas many as 24 inmates are packed in a sing cell. here the lights are us a on and tensions are high. >> hard as hell you have 24 inmates, you sleep when you can
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not when you want to. >> locked inside for 23 hours a day, the men must sleep, shower and eat inside their cell. >> dirty. it dirty. point plank dirty. when i first came here, i was free from blemish, now look at my arms. you see all these spots? i look like a leper now, they can't tell me what it is. >> this place is unsanitary. this place is filthy. >> convicted of armed robbery, bernard jones has been incarcerated for three-and-a-half years and is appealing his case. >> i have to use the bathroom. there ain't no shower curtain, when i'm taking a bath i got a dude walking by. >> temperatures can flare at any moment, officers are required to make hourly security checks. >> everything all right? >> normally look for cracks on the bars, check the bars, check for locks, make sure everything
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is secured. you look in the cells, making sure the inmate population isn't doing anything they are not supposed to. >> head's up. >> since drugs are frequently smuggled in the jail, specially trained canine units are brought in to find them. corporal perez is the canine handler for miami dade corrections and conducts cell searches with his dog, sandy. >> we found a pound one day, another day three quarters of a pound of marijuana. it coming in from one 10th of a gram up to a pound. >> often the searches turn up other dangerous contraband. >> this is the type of of stuff that i find, sometimes doing a narcotic sniff with sandy, walking to the cell, looking under mattresses and happened to pull the shanks out, i'm not looking for shanks, i happened to stumble upon this. >> don't trust any of them, none whatsoever. because they are not in here for
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singing too loud in church. >> you want to protect your staff, that is what our life blood is the officers. we could have the latest technology, the newest buildings, most secure buildings, but the staff that makes the system work. >> you spoke to the floor supervisor? >> yeah. >> what did they tell you? communication is the key, that way i know what is going on at all times in the cell. if you're not out there, you're not knowing what is going on, anything could happen. up next. >> willie! >> willie, you want to talk to the dock for? >> the challenges of confining the mentally ill. wake up!
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willie! willie! can you come to the door, sir? >> willie, do you want to talk to the doctor? >> the ninth floor of the pretrial detention center is a world in to itself. as part of the psychiatric unit, these cells are reserved for inmates with serious mental problems. >> sir? are you all right? >> dr. joseph portilier is the chief psychiatrist. he has worked at miami dade for the last ten years. jail cells have become mental institutions. i would say 20% of those who are incarcerated have a mental illness, a large part suffer from schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression. severe forms of mental illness.
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>> the mental lly ill is a seris problem in correctional facility. a lot of the mental state hospitals have closed down and the only options to the police agencies are bring them to the jails. that is a problem for us. because those inmates are a lot more unmanageable than the regular inmate population. >> take your medication. >> while the ultimate goal of the staff here is to provide proper medical care so the inmates can cooperate with their lawyers, eventually leave the jail, maintaining safe and sanitary conditions is a daily challenge. >> procedures right now that we wake up the inmates, handcuff them, the sit down, pick up the feet. the trustees will sweep, mop, clean the toilet, sink, pull out garbage, we unhandcuff them and they lay down. that is the main procedures we do every morning. clean up the cells.
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>> everybody has to eat first bu whatever they left over, they pass out extras. >> when i first started this is not the way it now. >> this officer has been working in the psychiatric unit since 1988. >> basically like the forgotten floor. this is 100 times better than it was in the 80s. always communicating with the inmates here. we have to always watch them, we see all sort of things happening. we're the eyes and ears of the medical staff. we report to the doctor, the nurses. basically we are the front line dealing with the inmates. >> have a seat right there. >> but there remains an element of danger in the unit. because the inmates here are often unpredictable and violent, staff members must take every precaution to protect themselves. >> these handcuffs are to secure an inmate to be seen by the doctor, the flex cuff, many
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occasion inmates could pop it off this thing. >> another primary concern for staff is keeping watch over suicidal inmates. >> the sink, toilet, everything that is grated, they can't use material, clothing or anything to hang themselves from. >> they are not allowed to have shoe strings, they can be used as a tool for them to hurt themselves. >> this is a safety garment. this material you can't rip this material. they can't use it like a sheet or blanket. like a poncho, big old poncho, goes on them, that's it. no pillow, no blanket, no sheets, no mattress. all about precaution. >> in addition to the mentally ill, there are other at risk inmates, including the elderly housed on a separate floor. >> good afternoon, gentlemen. any problems in the cell?
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>> no, ma'am. >> officer drain is one of the staff members assigned to supervise the older inmates. >> basically what i do when i get up here i do a perimeter check to make sure the inmates are awake and alive and breathing, and do a head count. fm they need anything pertaining to a policy, like they need to know when their court date is, i'll look it up for them. >> doing the best i can do. >> they put me because of my age, back in the day this used to be all this was open, they have this up here, so today, they changed it put the older guys up here. >> serving time for second degree murder, sammy pollard is temporarily at miami-dade until he testifies in another court case. >> i sleep on the top bunk, i got my own heaven, my own peace, i can block everything out. >> this is what i do, i get up here, i meditate, read, stay to
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myself most of the time. >> pollard's greatest hope he will reunite with the family he lost. >> i have a daughter i ain't never told her i love her, i got five grand children. i lost a lot of my life i can't get back i thank god i'm still living. next on lockup, women behind bars. >> women's detention center is the nicest but jail is hell. what's inside is a home. home protector plus from liberty mutual insurance, where the cost to both repair your house and replace what's inside are covered. so your life can settle right back into place. to learn more, visit libertymutual.com today.
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miami-dade corrections houses the females at the women's detention center less than a mile away from the main jail. >> well, this is my room. this is where i sleep at. this is my mother, this is my locker. this is just my little bachelor
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pad at the time. you know what i'm saying. >> lejean johnson is a former drug user arrested for selling crack cocaine. she and her cell mates have formed a group in which she holds the unofficial title of mom. >> this is linda, vernita, nayshell. we all get along. >> the specially the people that have been here any length of time. you form close friendships. >> pretty much quiet, no bickering. >> jean keps it together. >> this is what we do, twice a day, in the morning, and afternoon, we keep it clean like this. we have a clean shower. very clean. and she is the best bed maker in the cells. >> vernita smith was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon, awaiting transfer to prison. like many women, she was a drug
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abuser. >> basically you look at the crimes, they vary, the crimes vary, but most of them are centered around use of drugs. and the use of drugs from breaking and entering to armed robbery, to murder, attempted murder, child abuse charges, so the one common denominator most of them are centered around the use of intoxicants or drugs. >> i was in drugs real bad, i came to jail, found out i was pregnant. i gave birth to a healthy baby boy, he was drug-free, that was a blessing to me. >> bonita won't see her son until she completes one year prison sentence. >> whether she goes, she will take a parenting class, she'll go through the steps and do what she is supposed to. >> three times a day inmates are escorted to the cafeteria where they eat in strictly monitored shift. >> 24 more days i'm out of here.
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>> this is the only meal that is not great. baloney every day. hot meals in the morning and at night. this one -- >> this is the best part of the day, lunch time. >> pretty much we try to to eat and don't talk because if they catch you talking they tell you to get up throw your food away and you got to deal with it until 6:30, dinner time. >> out of control here not allowed to talk in the dining room, this is an exception, amazing we're not getting thrown out, because of you guys, you're not atloud say a word many. >> because the dining facility can only accommodate a small percent age of inmates at a time, each table has 15:00 to eat. >> we have to go now. >> i'll take a little water. >> no talking. >> women's detention center is the nicest of the facilities, if you can call them nice. jail is hell.
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>> i have low blood, i need 500 milligrams. by my private doctor. >> this is the third floor of the women's detention center, which houses inmates who need to be separated from the general population. many of of these women suffer from siex coupsychological prob. >> i was attacked during head count, one inmate hadn't been taking medication, just started to act out and then she just took it on herself just to leap over the two officers in front of me to try to strike at me, so we had to take her down. >> corrections personnel, who are usually great especially the ones on the mental health unit, can't force medication. so if a woman refuses it and she is grossly psychotic and starting to fight with officers,
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kicking and screaming, they can't give her medicine so they have to tie her down. so it's working under adverse conditions with extremely ill people. >> dr. m ary haber has worked in corrections for 35 years. >> there are less places for women to be treat afrd they leave here. even if they are release and go to a hospital in a short time treatment program, they come back. sometimes they commit crimes, deliberately to get arrested because they don't have a place to sleep, have not meal to eat and surviving on the street is really tough. >> when we built the women's detention center well under capacity, and one we open it up, we never could get back to capacity. that was a lot of need for housing female inmates. >> in an attempt to decrease recidivism, miami-dade corrections offers counseling services, life classes and
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vocational programs. >> women's detention center the most effective vocational program we have here is cosmetology. because they have the opportunity to receive a certification and does not print that they received this in jail. so they can present that to a possible employer when they get out. >> hold your rinl, start to clean out swing it, closes up the opening, you got it? >> elizabeth is the head instructor for the cosmetology program. >> i'm here for them and that is very important to them. that they would tell you straight out. they would tell anybody. >> comb it through. >> to them it's very important they have the class because otherwise they're upstairs for five hours in their cell doing nothing. except getting in trouble. >> take the comb out, clean it out of the and swing it back. >> with miss liz, she teaches us allow, how to deal with people,
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different opinions and instead of just acting out. she talks about that a lot. >> little bit of movement here. >> for me magnificent i don't mind coming in the double locked doors, i don't mind not being able to hear the outside world, i don't mind working with the inmates. i don't mind working with the officers. i don't mind carrying around a radio to call for help if i need help. all of it for me works. next on lockup, the difficulties of being locked up with a stranger. >> you have to smell him, smell when he blow his nose, his toes stink. read a book, man. >> you read a book! whee! whee! wheeeeeeeee! ah heads up. wheeeeeeeeeeee!
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i'm a dfrpi -- aditi roy. the soldier accused of killing afghan civilians was identified as robert bales. the suspect served three tours in iraq and suffered a brain injury before his deployment to
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afghanistan. meantime afghan president hamid karzei is at the end of the rope with the u.s. he says he's not getting full cooperation with an investigation in the weekend massacre. the u.s. says it will not be sending food aide to north korea if it goes ahead with plans to launch a satellite. south korea calls the launch a grave provocation. osama bin laden reportedly hoped to kill president obama and david petraeus, according to the washington post, documents showed he asked followers to come up with a plan. >> the cofounder of invisible children has been detained and hospitalized. they created a video about joseph kony. now back to lockup. miami-dade corrections, sixsix th largest jail system is like an overpopulated city.
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the task of running the facilities, meals, rec times, medications, a never ending struggle to care for a population of thousands. >> with most of their time spent locked behind bars, inmates at miami-dade corrections, welcome three hours a week they are allowed outside for exercise. >> come out to the yard, try to relieve stress, we ain't got to worry about the officers with us. one of our privileges, so basically everybody look forward to come to the yard. >> come out here for a stretch then run, run a little bit, do a little jumping jacks, push up and do a little shadow boxing, drying to get our lungs open. we need the fresh air to open our pores, we're confined 24
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hours a day. >> while inmates enjoy their time in the yard they value weekly visits with family and friends even more. today angela is visiting her boyfriend, bernard jones. >> i met him here and i have been dating him for four months now. my brother is locked up here, too, and he put him on the phone one day, thinking we wasn't going to click but we did. for angela it's an emotional time. after four months of visiting with bernard through a glass window, today they will be allowed to make physical contact. >> that is my first time being able to touch him.
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>> you're crazy.  >> read my card. today is the first time that we ever touched each other and i just want you to know this day will never be forgotten. i love you baby and i always will. >> i love you. >> i love you too. >> why can't you sit close to me? >> y'all can't sit like that. >> it's not easy being with someone in jail, it's really not. i'm happy being with him but it's not easy but we're doing a good job working out our problems. we will make it work. >> i try to get a visit five days a week, i try but it's not allowed. >> steve nicholas and atarius
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grissom are cell mates at one of the newer facilities. both men charges are lewd and lascivious conduct. they struggle to adapt to their close quarters. >> why are you listen to the radio? >> chill out read a book. >> you read a book. >> the place is too close for grown men nobody for a long period of time. >> yeah. come in here with him, hear him all day, he don't want to give me no battery, he wants to talk. i want to be out there, i can't use the phone, people ain't got collect. >> you got to smell him, when he blow his nose. his toes stink. >> although the center is considered cleaner and safer than the main jail, both nicholas and grissom would rather serve time at the older facility. >> we know it got rats and everything else, still better.
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no officers to micro manage to tell me to shut up or what to do. here we get loud we have to go behind the door. officer, officer, officer, officer. it's too micro managed over here for me. where is your supervisor? >> i think the biggest danger is not being prepared. not being prepared to tackle whatever comes about and whatever we may need to do at any given time. >> with limited staff, overseeing thousands of inmates, officers rely heavily on electronic survvee -- surveilla. sometimes we catch situations before the officer have an opportunity to call. it's constant. it's constant, always movement. and there is always something happening.
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>> if central control spots a disturbance taking place in the jail, help is immediately dispatched. >> we call out for assistance on the radio, that will be echo and repeated through the central control system throughout the entire building, everyone responds to that troubled area. >> body alarm activated. you see it auchlt you never know what to expect, all we do is sit here like a tom bomb waiting for something to happen. >> at the west detention center the largest of miami-dade's facilities, inmates are housed in dormitory settings with a correction officers in the unit at all times. >> what is unique having a facility of all men is that to me it is easier to control at times. relate to a man on one-on-one basis and calm. >> get off that bar. that's it for that. no more of that work outstuff.
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>> come on, guys, chow. >> some inmatesare kept away in a maximum security unit. >> i am a three time loser. this makes my third time, once you're in the system you will be back. >> eric johns was originally convicted of sexual assault. he completed his sentence but now he's back in jail for violating his parole. >> there is nothing in her that fascinates me or makes me happy. this is as close to a living hell as i want to come. >> the hardest thing from my point of view is just the consistent isolation. >> 39-year-old darrell robinson was convicted of sexually assaulting a young girl and is currently appealing his case kchlt. >> my family hired a private attorney. he strongly suggested that i
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take a plea, telling me if that little girl cries on the stand it could be over for you and you can go away for the rest of your life. and that was life in ri son without any parole. and i was ignorant to the system, never even had a parking ticket, so i took a plea and that began the worse nightmare of my life. >> i just lay in my bunk, then i just read. that's all. i read and look up. and i think about one day not being in here. i think about one day this all-over with. ♪ america, america, god shed his grace on thee ♪ ♪ and crowned thy good with
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brotherhood from sea to shining sea ♪ up next on lockup, patrolling inmates on the job. >> inmates have to be monitored at all times, we work with different types of tools, implements here and inmates have to be served on a daily basis. [ male announcer ] fighting pepperoni heartburn and pepperoni breath?
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like many inmates at miami-dade corrections, lozaro
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had trouble adjusting to life behind bars. >> we don't even wash our jumpers or clothes. i can't go outside i got to be stuck in here all day. i can't do nothing, can't play no cards, nothing. this is for the birds, man. real nasty. you got to eat it. >> while inmates complain about the food, the kitchen staff works around the clock to make sure no one goes hungry. >> start it up. start it up. >> this is a 24/7 operation, we have three shifts, everyone works. and if we don't put a meal out believe me it will be trouble. >> every year over eight million meals are served. the kitchen at the turner center alone is responsible for preparing 15,600 meals a day. >> decent food, certified by
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nutritionist, the quality is good, not that bad. forlso served medical diets  conditions, special meals as well.  cart. worked in years.tion for 15  inmates who he kitchen.   challenge for me sergeant is the safety s attchen he turner knight center.  inmate,  monitored at all different h here, a daily basis.  for. secured to the he. 
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every year over 100,000 people are arrested in miami-dade.  offenders. going e now. sir. yes,  march.  reform reduce has miam
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acceptance in the program. between  ?old. get somebody that s not , somebody prison life you them  too march.  one of the instructors. primary reenter society. program, longer ants are no inmates, they are cadets. to the arrive something somebody else do. down tray.ó sit. do free to do.t to ask for ermission for any thing you do. 
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tray. eat! hits irst thing th charge. do, when  it. do?  goes through what did into? boot camp   incarceration. 9:00  i allowed no and no ommunications with other inmates. like lightning in like hard you're get here,u because you get tired. move. boot  camp. e never  of tv you'll  s are incarcerated. arrested. coming children that are some of  tore, the only 
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parents we have. you a better  person, right? >> yes, sir. camp is a release program cadets job. acquire schooling? to become an sir.nt if possible,  you will be  money. of   wo, mostly the getting your  getting to school school,  outside world. found guilty grand theft. his  probation. people they  and  work i'll get , rob,  never had a sense of do, thinking that do something  then it about a change in them the. final phase of the
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are allowed where they are  months. >> are you going to be all right? yes, sir. wait to? second wait to get a life.t job.d  drill their  school,  job, to  be back on they are not not being  drugs or bad tivity like focused.  our  programs, om other  successful, we're active individual. particular building. your our head out of of tail. sir. roll out. >> aye, sir. d nmates enrolle from the  ever
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jail. do not come prison. % gond, 8 citizens in society. as far as  go program ors in this can go. difference, we    38 38  change people. rejoice when you just one. have  you to be saved. you. n sir.   that's it. in. g it  make -- i have to it.  tops theami-dae camp, the pop ity of the rest of the returns.y  as system, stepped ,

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