Lawsuit: Pending CatGuy666 v. _ThatBritishGuy_ [2026] DCR 82

J0kesOnU

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Case Filing


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
CIVIL ACTION

CatGuy666 (Represented by J0kesOnU of Theory, Talion & Partners Inc.)
Plaintiff

v.

_ThatBritishGuy_
Defendant

COMPLAINT
The Plaintiff complains against the Defendant as follows:

WRITTEN STATEMENT FROM THE PLAINTIFF

On or around the 18th of May 2026, I was looking for a Mechanic to craft me
a Hood Ornament. I announced in general chat asking if any Mechanics were
available. _ThatBritishGuy_ responded. I asked if they could craft the Hood
Ornament for me, and told them I had all the required materials. They said
"Sure." We arranged to meet at Northern Spawn. I gave them 2 Diamond Blocks
and 5 Gold Cash, everything needed to craft the item. At no point during any
of this did either of us mention payment of any kind.

After receiving my materials and crafting the Hood Ornament, the Defendant
returned holding the finished item and demanded $500DC "for the service."
I told them I had never agreed to pay anything, because I hadn't. No payment
was ever discussed. They then left the area with the Hood Ornament, keeping
both my materials and the item they crafted with them.

I tried to resolve this peacefully. I reached out in general chat, sent a
formal mail, and contacted them directly via /msg. Nothing worked. I had no
choice but to bring this before the court.

-- CatGuy666

I. PARTIES
1. CatGuy666 (Plaintiff)
2. _ThatBritishGuy_ (Defendant)

II. FACTS

1. On or around the 18th of May 2026, the Plaintiff used the in-game general
chat to solicit any player with the Mechanic job to craft a Hood Ornament.
(Evidence: P-01)

2. The Defendant, _ThatBritishGuy_, responded to this solicitation in the
in-game general chat. (Evidence: P-01)

3. The Plaintiff requested the Defendant craft a Hood Ornament, representing
that all necessary materials were in their possession. (Evidence: P-01)

4. At no point during the formation of this agreement did either party
discuss, request, offer, or agree upon any monetary payment.
(Evidence: P-01, P-02)

5. The Defendant responded "Sure," constituting clear and unambiguous
acceptance of the Plaintiff's offer as stated: crafting the Hood Ornament
in exchange for the Plaintiff's materials, with no payment term attached.
(Evidence: P-02)

6. A valid contract was thereby formed under the Contracts Act §4: the offer
was clear, acceptance was unambiguous and mirrored the offer's terms,
consideration was exchanged (materials for crafting service), both parties
demonstrated intent to be bound, and both possessed legal capacity.

7. The parties met at Northern Spawn and moved to a location to complete the
exchange. (Evidence: P-03)

8. The Plaintiff transferred to the Defendant 2 Diamond Blocks and 5 Gold
Cash, the materials required to craft the Hood Ornament.
(Evidence: P-03)

9. The Defendant successfully crafted the Hood Ornament using the Plaintiff's
materials. (Evidence: P-04)

10. Only after receiving the Plaintiff's property and completing the item did
the Defendant demand $500DC "for the service," a payment condition never
disclosed, offered, or agreed upon at any prior point. (Evidence: P-04)

11. The Plaintiff refused, stating no payment had been agreed to, and demanded
return of the Hood Ornament. (Evidence: P-04)

12. The Defendant left the area retaining the Hood Ornament, without
delivering it to the Plaintiff. (Evidence: P-04)

13. The Plaintiff publicly stated in the in-game general chat that the
Defendant had committed theft, stating "british guy is a theif" and
"he stole meh 2 diamond blocks and 5 gold cashes." (Evidence: P-04)

14. The Plaintiff sent the Defendant a formal in-game mail demanding return
of the Hood Ornament and warning of legal action. (Evidence: P-05)

15. The Plaintiff contacted the Defendant via the /msg command reiterating
the demand and warning of legal consequences. (Evidence: P-06)

16. The Defendant has failed and continues to fail to deliver the Hood
Ornament or otherwise remedy the harm caused, constituting an ongoing
deprivation of the Plaintiff's property.

III. CLAIMS FOR RELIEF

1. Breach of Contract
Redmont Civil Code Act Part VI §1; Contracts Act §4, §7, §12

A valid contract was formed between the Plaintiff and Defendant under the
Contracts Act §4. The Plaintiff's offer was clear: craft a Hood Ornament
in exchange for the necessary materials, with no payment discussed. The
Defendant's acceptance of "Sure" mirrored those terms exactly. The
Plaintiff's materials constituted valid consideration for the Defendant's
crafting service. Under Contracts Act §4(c), consideration need not be
adequate, only sufficient, and materials exchanged for labour plainly
satisfies this standard.

The Defendant breached this contract in two ways: (i) by unilaterally
imposing a $500DC payment condition that was never a term of the agreement,
after the Plaintiff had already transferred their property; and (ii) by
refusing to deliver the Hood Ornament, failing their core contractual
obligation under Contracts Act §7.

The Defendant further violated the implied covenant of good faith and fair
dealing under Contracts Act §12, which is read into every contract under
Redmont law. Accepting materials under an agreed-upon exchange and then
withholding the product of that exchange to extract unauthorized payment
is a paradigmatic breach of good faith.

This violation is Strict Liability under RCCA Part VI §1. The Defendant's
intent is not required to establish liability; the breach occurred and
the harm followed.

2. Misrepresentation
Redmont Civil Code Act Part VI §2; Contracts Act §8

By accepting the Plaintiff's offer without disclosing any payment
requirement, the Defendant made an implied false statement of material
fact: that the terms as presented (materials-for-service, no payment)
were the complete terms of the agreement. This representation induced the
Plaintiff to transfer 2 Diamond Blocks and 5 Gold Cash. Had the Plaintiff
known a $500DC demand would follow, they would not have transferred their
property. The Plaintiff suffered direct loss as a result.

The Plaintiff is entitled to Rescission of the transaction and restitution
of the transferred materials or their fair market value.

3. Unjust Enrichment
Redmont Civil Code Act Part X §1

The Defendant obtained the Plaintiff's materials, which were used as the
input for the Hood Ornament, and is retaining the Hood Ornament itself,
all at the Plaintiff's expense. There is no legal justification for
retaining either benefit. The Defendant received the materials under a
valid contract and refused to fulfil the corresponding delivery obligation.
Retaining both the consumed materials and the completed product constitutes
unjust enrichment, entitling the Plaintiff to Restitution.

4. Misleading Conduct in Trade or Commerce
Redmont Civil Code Act Part VI §3

The Defendant, acting in their professional capacity as a Mechanic engaged
in the supply of crafting services, engaged in misleading and deceptive
conduct in connection with the supply of those services. The Defendant
agreed to perform the service, accepted the Plaintiff's materials,
completed the service, and only then, with the Plaintiff's property already
transferred and irrecoverable, revealed a payment demand the Plaintiff had
no prior opportunity to evaluate or decline.

This conduct was intentional: the payment demand was timed specifically to
occur after the point of no return for the Plaintiff. No reasonable person
exercising ordinary care could have anticipated an undisclosed $500DC
demand following an agreement in which payment was never raised. The
puffery defense does not apply; the plaintiff-reliance defense does not
apply, as the Plaintiff had no basis on which to anticipate or protect
against an undisclosed payment condition.

The Plaintiff seeks the maximum of 250 Civil Penalty Units under this
section.

5. Failure to Deliver Goods or Services
Redmont Civil Code Act Part VI §4

The Defendant agreed under a valid transaction to craft and deliver a Hood
Ornament to the Plaintiff. The Defendant completed the item and then
refused, without lawful excuse, to deliver it. A payment demand invented
unilaterally after the agreement was formed and after the Plaintiff's
property was received is not a lawful excuse within the meaning of
RCCA Part VI §4.

The Plaintiff seeks Specific Performance in the form of the Hood Ornament
and 200 Civil Penalty Units under this section.

6. Conversion
Redmont Civil Code Act Part VII §7(a), §7(b), §7(c)(ii), §7(c)(v)

The Defendant wrongfully obtained the Plaintiff's materials (2 Diamond
Blocks and 5 Gold Cash) and is intentionally withholding the resulting
Hood Ornament, depriving the Plaintiff of their property. The Defendant
obtained the materials through deception: by implying through their conduct
and unqualified acceptance that the exchange would proceed on the agreed
terms, while concealing an intention to withhold the completed item pending
undisclosed payment. This satisfies §7(c)(ii) (obtaining property through
deception) and §7(c)(v) (obtaining property by false promise pursuant to
a scheme to defraud).

The §7(e) defense, that the Defendant reasonably believed they had a right
to the property, is unavailable. The contract contained no payment term.
The Defendant accepted the offer without raising any payment condition.
A belief that one is entitled to withhold another's property pending a
payment condition one invented unilaterally, after the other party has
already performed, is not a reasonable belief as a matter of law. The
Defendant created the very situation they now seek to use as justification.

The Plaintiff seeks Treble Damages and Restitution under this section.

7. Punitive Damages
Redmont Civil Code Act Part III §3(2)(b)(iii) and §3(2)(b)(iv)

The Defendant's conduct independently satisfies two grounds for punitive
damages.

Under §3(2)(b)(iii): The Defendant acted with reckless indifference to
whether harm would result. They accepted materials under a clear agreement,
completed the work, and withheld the product without any regard for the
Plaintiff's resulting loss.

Under §3(2)(b)(iv): The Defendant's conduct was dishonest, deceptive, and
in bad faith. The undisclosed payment demand was engineered to occur only
after the Plaintiff had already transferred their property, deliberately
removing the Plaintiff's ability to make an informed decision about whether
to proceed.

Taken together, this conduct represents a substantial departure from
acceptable commercial standards and warrants punishment beyond
compensation alone.

IV. PRAYER FOR RELIEF
The Plaintiff seeks the following from the Defendant:

1. $1,296.60DC in Treble Damages, representing three times the fair market
value of the materials transferred by the Plaintiff (2 Diamond Blocks and
5 Gold Cash, fair market value $432.20DC), pursuant to the Conversion
claim under RCCA Part VII §7.

2. The Hood Ornament as Specific Performance, pursuant to the Failure to
Deliver claim under RCCA Part VI §4; in the alternative, $432.20DC in
Restitution representing the fair market value of the Hood Ornament,
should Specific Performance no longer be practicable.

3. $1,728.80DC in Punitive Damages, pursuant to RCCA Part III §3.

4. Up to 450 Civil Penalty Units ($45,000DC at $100 per unit), comprising:
- Up to 250 Civil Penalty Units under RCCA Part VI §3
(Misleading Conduct in Trade or Commerce)
- Up to 200 Civil Penalty Units under RCCA Part VI §4
(Failure to Deliver Goods or Services)

5. Legal fees at 30% of the total case value of $48,025.40DC (comprising
$3,025.40DC in monetary damages and $45,000DC in Civil Penalty Units),
amounting to $14,407.62DC, pursuant to RCCA Part III §7(2)(a), subject
to the Federal Court minimum of $6,000DC under RCCA Part III §7(2)(c).

Total Primary Claim: $3,025.40DC in damages, up to 450 Civil Penalty Units
($45,000DC), the Hood Ornament (or $432.20DC in the alternative), and
$14,407.62DC in legal fees.

Evidence:
- P-01: Chat log showing Plaintiff's general chat solicitation and
Defendant's initial response
- P-02: Chat log showing Defendant's acceptance ("Sure") and confirmation
of the arrangement
- P-03: Chat log showing the parties meeting at Northern Spawn and the
transfer of materials
- P-04: Chat log showing the Defendant's payment demand, the Plaintiff's
refusal, the Defendant's departure, and the Plaintiff's subsequent
public statements
- P-05: In-game mail from Plaintiff to Defendant demanding return of the
Hood Ornament
- P-06: /msg exchange between Plaintiff and Defendant reiterating the demand

Witnesses:
- Staff members with access to drop logs for CatGuy666 and _ThatBritishGuy_
between 18 May 2026 00:00 UTC and 21 May 2026 00:00 UTC, to be called
during the discovery phase pursuant to the court's order.

By making this submission, I agree I understand the penalties of lying in
court and the fact that I am subject to perjury should I knowingly make a
false statement in court.

DATED: This 11th day of June 2026

 

Attachments

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Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR EMERGENCY INJUNCTION

The Plaintiff moves that either:
1. The DHS seize items as listed- 1 Hood Ornament
2. The Defendant have assets frozen in the amount of 432.20DC$, the fair market value of the materials used to craft 1 Hood Ornament.

As to prevent further possible damage to the Plaintiff's property or what remains of it in the Defendant's possession.

 

Writ of Summons


@ThatBritishGuy , is required to appear before the District Court in the case of Catguy666 v. _ThatBritishGuy_ [2026] DCR 82

Failure to appear within 72 hours of this summons will result in a default judgement based on the known facts of the case.

Both parties should make themselves aware of the Court Rules and Procedures, including the option of an in-game trial should both parties request one.

 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR EMERGENCY INJUNCTION

The Plaintiff moves that either:
1. The DHS seize items as listed- 1 Hood Ornament
2. The Defendant have assets frozen in the amount of 432.20DC$, the fair market value of the materials used to craft 1 Hood Ornament.

As to prevent further possible damage to the Plaintiff's property or what remains of it in the Defendant's possession.

The Defence requests the opportunity to respond to the EI.
 

Objection


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - IMPROPER EVIDENCE

In SCR 20 [2025], the Supreme Court ruled that 'Raw text files are not admissible as evidence unless corroborated by a secondary source' and struck down all text logs as evidence from that case.

THEREFORE, inline with precedent set by the Supreme Court, the Defence moves to strike P-01, P-02, P-03, P-04, P-05 and P-06 from the record for being improper.

 
The Defence requests the opportunity to respond to the EI.
You have 24 hours to respond.

Objection


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - IMPROPER EVIDENCE

In SCR 20 [2025], the Supreme Court ruled that 'Raw text files are not admissible as evidence unless corroborated by a secondary source' and struck down all text logs as evidence from that case.

THEREFORE, inline with precedent set by the Supreme Court, the Defence moves to strike P-01, P-02, P-03, P-04, P-05 and P-06 from the record for being improper.

I won't be ruling on this yet, but I am inclined to accept this. The plaintiff has the burden to provide corroborating evidence for these logs during discovery; otherwise, they will be struck.


The defense has 48 hours to provide their answer to complaint
 
Your Honor,

I'd like to notify the court that I've been added as co-counsel on the Plaintiff's side.

 
You have 24 hours to respond.


I won't be ruling on this yet, but I am inclined to accept this. The plaintiff has the burden to provide corroborating evidence for these logs during discovery; otherwise, they will be struck.


The defense has 48 hours to provide their answer to complaint

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT

The Defendant and his counsel were provided 24 hours to respond to the Emergency Injunction submitted by the Plaintiff, and at the time of this motions submission, they have failed to meet that deadline by 44 hours. Additionally, The Defendant and his counsel were provided 48 hours to produce an answer to complaint, and at the time of this motions submission, they have failed to meet that deadline by 20 hours. Neither the Defandant nor his counsel have requested any extensions of deadlines, and have simply left their duties to this court unfulfilled.
In the interest of a speedy trial for the Plaintiff, we request that the honorable court issue a default judgement based on the known facts of this case.

 
Your honours, I have just found out my hired lawyer has departed Redmont on an extended LOA on the 18th which I wasn't aware of until I found out just now.

I humbly request 24 hours to allow me time to sort out a new lawyer
 
Your honours, due to the suddenness of this situation and my lack of time due to IRL work commitments to properly commit myself in this case, I request to be represented by a public defender in DCR 82 [2026].
 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT

The Defendant and his counsel were provided 24 hours to respond to the Emergency Injunction submitted by the Plaintiff, and at the time of this motions submission, they have failed to meet that deadline by 44 hours. Additionally, The Defendant and his counsel were provided 48 hours to produce an answer to complaint, and at the time of this motions submission, they have failed to meet that deadline by 20 hours. Neither the Defandant nor his counsel have requested any extensions of deadlines, and have simply left their duties to this court unfulfilled.
In the interest of a speedy trial for the Plaintiff, we request that the honorable court issue a default judgement based on the known facts of this case.

Motion for Default Judgement denied.

The defendant seems to be having lawyer issues and is requesting a public defender. I will rule on the EI for the lack of response.

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR EMERGENCY INJUNCTION

The Plaintiff moves that either:
1. The DHS seize items as listed- 1 Hood Ornament
2. The Defendant have assets frozen in the amount of 432.20DC$, the fair market value of the materials used to craft 1 Hood Ornament.

As to prevent further possible damage to the Plaintiff's property or what remains of it in the Defendant's possession.

Emergency Injunction Granted.

The DHS is to seize 1 Hood ornament from _ThatBritishGuy_. If a hood ornament can't be found in their possession, then $432.20 will be seized in its place.
Your honours, due to the suddenness of this situation and my lack of time due to IRL work commitments to properly commit myself in this case, I request to be represented by a public defender in DCR 82 [2026].
Granted. This case will be in short recess until a Public Defender is assigned
 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT

Following the court's decision to provide a Public Defender for the Defendant, the Defendant and his newly appointed Public Defender were provided 48 hours, plus a 24 hour extension, to produce an Answer to Complaint. At the time of this submission, they have failed to meet that deadline by 10 hours. Neither the Defandant nor his Public Defender have requested any additional extensions of deadlines, and have simply left their duties to this court unfulfilled.In the interest of a speedy trial for the Plaintiff, we request that the honorable court issue a default judgement based on the known facts of this case.

 
My apologies, I am dealing with four cases at the moment and confused this deadline with another. The Answer to Complaint is attached below.

Answer to Complaint


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
ANSWER TO COMPLAINT

CatGuy666
Plaintiff

v.

_ThatBritishGuy_
Defendant

I. ANSWER TO COMPLAINT
1. The defense AFFIRMS facts 1-7 and 12-15 of the Complaint
dispute 8,9,10,12
3. The defense
DISPUTES that the plaintiff transferred to the defendant two Diamond Blocks and five Gold Cash
4. The defense DISPUTES that the defendant successfully crafted the Hood Ornament using the plaintiff's
materials
5. The defense AFFIRMS that the defendant left the area retaining a Hood Ornament while DISPUTING that the defendant did not deliver an Ornament to the Plaintiff
6. The defense
DISPUTES that the defendant failed to and has continued to fail to produce the ornament to the plaintiff

II. DEFENCES
1. The defendant delivered the ornament to the plaintiff within around one day of the agreement taking place
2. There was and is therefore no ongoing deprivation of property
3. There was no timeframe specified in the contract itself
4. The plaintiff has failed to show that they upheld their end of the contract by transferring materials to the defendant

By making this submission, I agree I understand the penalties of lying in court and the fact that I am subject to perjury should I knowingly make a false statement in court.

DATED: This 26th day of June 2026

The defense calls _ThatBritishGuy_ and CatGuy666 as witnesses

 
Motion for Default Judgement denied.

The defendant seems to be having lawyer issues and is requesting a public defender. I will rule on the EI for the lack of response.

Emergency Injunction Granted.

The DHS is to seize 1 Hood ornament from _ThatBritishGuy_. If a hood ornament can't be found in their possession, then $432.20 will be seized in its place.

Granted. This case will be in short recess until a Public Defender is assigned
Would the defense be allowed to respond to the Emergency Injunction at this time?
 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGEMENT

Following the court's decision to provide a Public Defender for the Defendant, the Defendant and his newly appointed Public Defender were provided 48 hours, plus a 24 hour extension, to produce an Answer to Complaint. At the time of this submission, they have failed to meet that deadline by 10 hours. Neither the Defandant nor his Public Defender have requested any additional extensions of deadlines, and have simply left their duties to this court unfulfilled.In the interest of a speedy trial for the Plaintiff, we request that the honorable court issue a default judgement based on the known facts of this case.

Motion for Default Judgment denied.

Public defenders are here to provide constitutionally required representation to people. Allowing this motion would bypass the required representation and possibly violate rights. Additionally, the DCR is packed, and the Public defenders office is also swamped. If it takes a bit of additional time to ensure proper representation, especially with this DCR Docket, this court will work with that.


Would the defense be allowed to respond to the Emergency Injunction at this time?
You may, but the EI will stay in effect until the court can hear your response.
 
Motion for Default Judgment denied.

Public defenders are here to provide constitutionally required representation to people. Allowing this motion would bypass the required representation and possibly violate rights. Additionally, the DCR is packed, and the Public defenders office is also swamped. If it takes a bit of additional time to ensure proper representation, especially with this DCR Docket, this court will work with that.



You may, but the EI will stay in effect until the court can hear your response.

Objection


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - Breach of Procedure

Redmont Court Rules and Procedures Rule 6.6 dictates that the response time for an Emergency Injunction in the District Court of Redmont is 24 hours. It has been 71 hours since the defense was allowed to respond to the Emergency Injunction, 47 hours past the deadline.
The Defense has repeatedly failed to adhere to the deadlines set forth by this court, and has thus significantly delayed proceedings. The Redmont Constitution Part V §9 states that "Any citizen, criminal or otherwise will have the right to a speedy and fair trial...".
Additionally, in Toadking v Commonwealth of Redmont [2025], a similar Breach of Procedure Objection was sustained by the presiding Justice:

In consideration of the deadlines set forth by the court, and the Plaintiff's constitutional right to a speedy and fair trial, the Plaintiff would like to request that proceedings move forward into discovery at this time.

 

Objection


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
OBJECTION - Breach of Procedure

Redmont Court Rules and Procedures Rule 6.6 dictates that the response time for an Emergency Injunction in the District Court of Redmont is 24 hours. It has been 71 hours since the defense was allowed to respond to the Emergency Injunction, 47 hours past the deadline.
The Defense has repeatedly failed to adhere to the deadlines set forth by this court, and has thus significantly delayed proceedings. The Redmont Constitution Part V §9 states that "Any citizen, criminal or otherwise will have the right to a speedy and fair trial...".
Additionally, in Toadking v Commonwealth of Redmont [2025], a similar Breach of Procedure Objection was sustained by the presiding Justice:

In consideration of the deadlines set forth by the court, and the Plaintiff's constitutional right to a speedy and fair trial, the Plaintiff would like to request that proceedings move forward into discovery at this time.

Sustained

We will move to Discovery. Discovery will last for 5 days and end on July 8th at 11:30 pm EST
 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION TO COMPEL

The Plaintiff moves to compel the staff team to produce the following:
- Drop logs between CatGuy666 and _ThatBritishGuy_ between May 16th, 2026 and July 12th, 2026.
On the basis that this will serve as further evidence to prove that the Defendant failed to produce a Hood Ornament for the Plaintiff despite being provided the materials as per the Plaintiff’s side of the contract.

 

Motion


IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
MOTION TO COMPEL

The Plaintiff moves to compel the staff team to produce the following:
- Corroboration of the accuracy of the text logs submitted into evidence (P-01 through P-06)

Within this Motion, the Plaintiff will include the following transcript of a conversation between counsel and End (on behalf of the staff team):

1783189750822.png
1783189750828.png

And notes that the chat logs submitted have been challenged:
Lawsuit: Pending - CatGuy666 v. _ThatBritishGuy_ [2026] DCR 82

 
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