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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Kimber, R v [2001] EWCA Crim 643 (21st March, 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2001/643.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Crim 643 |
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Case No: 1998/05230/Y5
Neutral Citation Number: [2001] EWCA CRIM 643
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Wednesday 21st March 2001
LORD JUSTICE POTTER
MR JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
and
MR JUSTICE LEVESON
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
REGINA |
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- v - |
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DAVID PATRICK KIMBER |
(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Neil Ford QC & Stephen Mooney Esquire (instructed by Goughs, Devizes for David Kimber)
Mark Evans Esq QC and Miss Kathleen Smoker (instructed by C.P.S. for the Crown)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Judgment
As Approved by the Court
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE POTTER:
1. On 2nd March 2001, we allowed an application by the Crown Prosecution Service ("CPS") to extend the time within which to re-arraign David Patrick Kimber ("the appellant") upon an indictment alleging the murder of Maria Vertannes to Friday 16th March 2001 and we dismissed a cross application by the appellant to direct a verdict of not guilty to that indictment. We now provide the reasons for that decision.
2. On 23rd July 1998 in the Crown Court at Bristol (before Mr Justice Owen and a jury), the appellant was convicted of murder and was sentenced to life imprisonment. On 10th November 2000, based upon the decisions in Luc Thiet Thuan v. R. [1996] 1 All ER 1033 and R. v. Smith (Morgan) [2000] 3 WLR 654, another division of this Court (Henry LJ, Hooper J and Goldring J) allowed his appeal against conviction and ordered a re-trial. The Court directed that the appellant be re-arraigned on a fresh indictment at Bristol Crown Court within two months. Because of shortage of time, the Court did not then give its reasons which were subsequently handed down on 19th December 2000.
3. On 16th November 2000 the Registrar of Criminal Appeals wrote to the Court Manager at Bristol with copies to the CPS and the defence. As is customary, the letter included the observation:
"As you will know, it is the responsibility of the Crown to see that a fresh indictment is preferred against Kimber but it is the responsibility of the listing officer to ensure that he is arraigned within a period of two months from 10 November"
4. That letter was received by the CPS on 20th November 2000 and, on the same day, a fresh indictment was lodged by the CPS with the Bristol Crown Court accompanied by a covering letter which brought to the attention of the court manager the need for re-arraignment within two months.
5. Without the earlier notice or communication to the CPS or the chambers of counsel concerned in the case on either side which is customary, the Court listed the case for a preliminary directions hearing on Monday 18th December 2000. The case simply appeared in the daily lists for that date which were faxed to the office of the CPS at 3.30 p.m. on Friday 15th December. On that day, Miss Cassidy, the CPS employed barrister with overall responsibility for the case, was on annual leave and the caseworker assigned to the case was away training. The Trials Unit Business Manager was aware that the matter was listed before the Court of Appeal on Tuesday 19th December 2000 for the handing down of the formal judgment in the appeal and was not expecting, or alert to the possibility, that the case might be listed in the Bristol Crown Court before that date. The result was that the listing of the case for Monday 18th December was overlooked.
6. Unfortunately it was also overlooked in the chambers of prosecuting counsel. Consequently, no one was in court for the prosecution when the Recorder of Bristol, His Honour Judge Dyer, was ready to hear the matter. The Court contacted the clerk to prosecuting counsel by telephone. Miss Penny Wilson of those chambers happened to be present at court on another matter and was contacted by her clerk in order to assist. She had no papers and no knowledge of the case whatsoever.
7. However, junior counsel for the defence was present, expecting Mr Kimber to be arraigned. We take what then happened from his draft affidavit which is before us. Miss Wilson indicated to him that she had been instructed to represent the Crown and to apply for the case to be adjourned pending the handing down of the approved judgment of the Court of Appeal on the next day. He could see no reason why the re-arraignment could not take place as the appellant was undoubtedly going to plead not guilty and he pressed Miss Wilson to allow him to be arraigned, indicating that he had prepared a plea and directions form which dealt with all the details required. However, Miss Wilson, knowing nothing about the case, said that she proposed to apply for an adjournment. Defence counsel then told Miss Wilson that, as she had had so little involvement in the case, he would summarise the position to the Recorder of Bristol and set out the nature of her application. He then addressed the court.
8. Within our summary of defence counsel's draft affidavit we now interpolate
the transcript of what occurred in court.
"DEFENCE COUNSEL: .... I can summarise the position thus: there was a trial in
respect of this matter in the spring of 1998. Thereafter, appeal proceedings
were launched which were delayed pending the decision of the House of Lords in
respect of an important authority. A hearing was ultimately heard and the
Court of Appeal ordered that the 1998 case be retried. Miss Wilson, who has
hitherto had absolutely no involvement in the case whatsoever - and I thank her
for standing in the breach at such a late stage - is instructed to apply for
the case to be adjourned and I make no opposition to that application. Mr
Kimber is in custody and I do not make an application about that either.
JUDGE DYER: You are content with that, that it should be adjourned to a date
to be fixed?
MISS WILSON: My Lord, yes.
JUDGE DYER: It is not suitable at the moment having a plea and directions
hearing, but I do not think we can just leave it in abeyance. I think it ought
to be brought back in front of me for something by, say, 15th
January.
DEFENCE COUNSEL: Yes.
MISS WILSON: My Lord, I would agree with that and a date can be fixed for a
plea and directions hearing.
JUDGE DYER: Yes, plea and directions hearing, 15th January 2001.
And there is no problem with custody time limits before that date?
(Conferring with clerk) Thank you.
Well, David Patrick Kimber, I will see you on ... the 15th is not a
Sunday is it? Just to make quite certain I have not just happened to have
picked a Sunday (conferring with clerk). Monday. Very convenient.
Right thank you. Thank you. Yes, Monday, 15th."
9. We shall return to analyse this exchange. Suffice it to say here that
defence counsel entirely failed to mention the time limit for re-arraignment
either to Miss Wilson or to the Court. This was not an oversight. Returning
to his draft affidavit, he has frankly set out why he did not do so.
10. Defence counsel deposes that, before coming to court, he familiarised
himself with the order of the Court of Appeal confirmed in the letter from the
Registrar, and it was clear to him that, if the prosecution did not secure
re-arraignment by 10th January then, under s.8(1)(b) of the Criminal
Appeals Act 1968, the defence would be entitled to apply for the order for a
re-trial to be set aside and a verdict of acquittal entered. However, he
states that he considered it the responsibility of the Crown alone to ensure
the timely arraignment of Mr Kimber and that it was no part of his duty to draw
the potential time limit to the attention of the prosecution or the court. He
asserts that if he did so, he could rightly be criticised by Mr Kimber and his
professional clients for doing an act which is expressly not in the interest of
Mr Kimber, and he cites paragraph 12(1) of the Code of Conduct for the Bar of
England and Wales (7th ed) ("the Code") which reads:
"When defending a client on a criminal charge, a barrister must endeavour to
protect his client from conviction except by a competent tribunal and upon
legally admissible evidence sufficient to support conviction for the offence
charged"
11. He also refers to paragraph 303(a) which reads:
"A barrister must promote and protect fearlessly and by all proper and lawful
means the lay client's best interests and do so without regard to his own
interests or to any consequences for himself or any other person including any
professional client or other intermediary or another barrister."
12. Finally, he confirms that he was also aware of paragraph 302 of the Code
which reads:
"A barrister has an overriding duty to the court to act with independence in
the interests of justice: he must assist the court in the administration of
justice and must not deceive or knowingly or recklessly mislead the court."
13. In this respect he states that, if he had been asked whether there were any
difficulties with regard to the order imposed by the Court of Appeal on
10th November then, under paragraph 302, he would have regarded
himself as obliged to answer the question and assist the court. However, as he
was not so asked, he made no mention of the date. He also states that,
subsequently, he informed leading counsel of what had happened and asked if
counsel were under a duty to inform the Crown of the time limit point. He was
advised that he was under no such obligation and that the Crown would in all
probability rectify the situation within the next three weeks. For those
reasons he did not inform the Court or Miss Wilson of the impending time limit.
14. Unfortunately the Crown did not rectify the situation for the following
reasons. On the basis that defence counsel agreed to the adjournment to
15th January 2001 (the date suggested by the Court), Miss Wilson too
consented, lacking as she did any reason or information which would cause her
to question that as an appropriate date. She, or her chambers, then reported
the date back to the CPS. Miss Cassidy has deposed that the Trials Unit
Business Manager of the CPS received a telephone call from Miss Wilson's
chambers to the effect that the case had been adjourned to 15th
January 2001. However, because the Business Manager was aware that the case
was listed for formal judgment in the Court of Appeal on 19th
December 2000 she did not appreciate the importance of that date. As to Miss
Cassidy herself, having heard that, as a result of the hearing on
18th December, the case had been adjourned, she assumed that it had
been properly re-listed within the relevant eight-week period which was known
to the court and thus she did not think it necessary to check the file to
ensure that was so.
15. Nor, following Judge Dyer's order, did the listing office at Bristol Crown
Court pick up the error that had been made. It was the Senior Listing Officer
at Bristol Crown Court who had the responsibility for the listing of the case.
Having arranged for the matter to be listed and dealt with by way of
re-arraignment before the Recorder of Bristol on 18th December 2000,
he checked the Court's computer records before the Christmas break and saw that
the plea and directions hearing had been adjourned to 15th January
2001. However, he made the assumption, with nothing to suggest otherwise, that
the re-arraignment had taken place on the 18th December, the
question of directions being put over to the New Year. It was only after the
adjourned hearing on 15th January 2001 that he learned that the
defendant had not been arraigned on 18th December, and as a result,
the deadline of 10th January 2001 had not been met.
16. Before turning to the law it is appropriate to gather together the strands
of what happened and to reach appropriate conclusions of fact. First, it is
clear that all parties (including the Crown Court at Bristol) had been informed
of the time limits. Quite properly, steps to have the case listed quickly were
put in hand so that the case was, in fact, brought before the Court before the
judgment of the Court of Appeal (announced orally at the conclusion of the
hearing) had even been handed down.
17. Secondly, at the hearing before Judge Dyer, the Court and the prosecuting
counsel proceeded in total ignorance of the deadline and were not enlightened.
In his draft affidavit, defence counsel does not identify two other provisions
of the Code (at paragraph 708) which read:
"A barrister when conducting proceedings in Court:
18. We consider it is clear that the duty of defence counsel was not, in the
events which happened, limited in the manner he has propounded (see paragraphs
10-13 above). Having undertaken to summarise the position to the Court, on the
basis that Miss Wilson was ignorant of it, he was plainly obliged to do so in
such a way as to put the judge fully in the picture as to the deadline for
re-arraignment so that he could make an informed decision as to the appropriate
order to make. Not only did he fail to do so, but he agreed the date of the
15th January knowing full well that by that date it would not be
open to the Court to proceed with a plea and directions hearing as envisaged.
Finally, knowing that he was the only one in court acquainted with the details
of the case, he remained silent when the Judge specifically raised the question
of the custody time limit. There was, of course, no problem with that
particular limit: there was, however, a time limit far more fundamental which
gave rise to the prospect that, if the case did not come back before then, Mr
Kimber would be entitled to a verdict of not guilty. It is clear to us that,
by summarising the matter to the court in the general way he did, without any
reference to the deadline of which he was well aware, and by saying "Yes" when
Judge Dyer suggested the date of 15th January 2001, defence counsel
represented to the court that such date was an appropriate date when it was
not.
19. In this Court, Mr Neil Ford Q.C. for the appellant has not sought to defend
defence counsel's failure to inform the Court of the deadline of
10th January 2001. Mr Ford submitted that allowance had to be made
for the fact that he had to make a difficult decision on the spur of the
moment. That is an entirely fair point, but it is also appropriate to note
that defence counsel remained of the view that he had behaved perfectly
properly, at least up to the time that his draft affidavit was served.
20. In R. v. G. B. L. (28th November 2000, unreported) the
Court of Appeal dealt with a case in which the judge had failed to direct the
jury appropriately. Having dealt with the point of law, Latham L.J.
observed:
"It is a matter of regret that the judge's attention was not drawn to the fact
that he failed to direct the jury in accordance with that principle. That
seems to us to be an obligation which lay on both counsel in the circumstances
of a case such as this. Judges are entitled to assistance from counsel in
relation to directions as to the law, and it seems to us that it is important
that counsel should appreciate that that duty rests on both the prosecution and
the defence."
21. The same is in our view true in relation to matters of the kind arising in
this case. Quite apart from the provisions of the Bar Code, an advocate
(whether barrister or solicitor) should not do anything which encourages or
knowingly permits the court to proceed on a false basis.
22. We turn now to what happened subsequently. In relation to Miss Wilson, we
do not criticise her at all. She was in no way responsible for the mistake
made by the court, having stepped in at minimal notice and being unaware of the
deadline. Thereafter she reported back to the CPS the date of the adjourned
hearing. As for the CPS, the matter having been expeditiously brought before
the court well within the time limit, the assumption was simply made that the
directions given by the court had been given in the knowledge of, and so as to
comply with, the time limit; it simply did not occur to Miss Cassidy that the
court would have proceeded in ignorance of the time limit. Thus, the CPS were
aware of the need for expedition; however, the relevant lawyer believed that
the requirement had been satisfied.
23. With that analysis, we now turn to the law. Section 8(1) of the Criminal
Appeals Act 1968 as amended by section 43(3) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988
provides:
"(1) A person who is to be tried for an offence in pursuance of an order under
section 7 of this Act shall be tried on a fresh indictment preferred by
direction of the Court of Appeal but after the end of two months from the date
of the order for his re-trial he may not be arraigned on an indictment
preferred in pursuance of such a direction unless the Court of Appeal give
leave.
1(A) Where a person has been ordered to be tried but may not be arraigned
without leave, he may apply to the Court of Appeal to set aside the order for
re-trial and to direct the court of trial to enter a judgment of acquittal of
the offence for which he was ordered to be re-tried.
1(B) On an application under sub-section (1) or (1A) above the Court of Appeal
shall have power - (a) to grant leave to arraign; or (b) to direct the entry of
a judgment and verdict of acquittal, but shall not give leave to arraign unless
they are satisfied - (i) that the prosecution has acted with all due
expedition: and (ii|) that there is a good and sufficient cause for a re-trial
in spite of the lapse of time since the order under section 7 of this act was
made."
24. The leading authority upon the approach to the section is the case of R.
v. Coleman (1992) 95 Cr App R 345, another case in which a series of
oversights had occurred, leading to the expiry of the time limit for
re-arraignment under an order for re-trial following an appeal, following which
the prosecutor applied for leave to re-arraign the defendant out of time. In
respect of that application, Lord Lane CJ, stated:
"This Court, we remind ourselves, in the terms of the Act "shall not give leave
to arraign unless they are satisfied that the prosecution has acted with all
due expedition" - the second limb does not affect us, that has been
satisfied.
The way in which, it appears to us, it should be approached is this. Can we be
satisfied that the prosecution have acted with all due expedition? If we
cannot, then we are obliged to refuse the application. "Expedition" in this
context must mean promptness, or possibly speed. It is certain that in the
circumstances which we have described, there was no promptness or speed
exhibited by the applicant. The reason there was no promptness or speed was
because no one realised that promptness or speed was required.
What then does the word "due" mean? If it means "required in all the
circumstances of the case" and no more than that, it might be possible to say
that since Hawker's appeal had yet to be heard, and since the two men would
clearly have to be retried together, no amount of promptness was required, and
any promptness that was required was minimal. Consequently the required speed
was achieved. That is one interpretation of the word "due".
If on the other hand it means simply "reasonable" or "proper", which would on
the prima facie reading of it seem to be the case, then the prosecution have
not exercised "reasonable and proper" speed. They forgot all about this
necessity, if ever they knew about it, and did not take the action until
someone jogged their elbow very many months later.
True it was that there was some mix up and difficulty between the Crown
Prosecution Service, the Crown Court at Grimsby and the Criminal Appeal Office.
But it was open to the Crown Prosecution Service, the applicant here, to take
steps at very early stage to expedite matters and to see that application was
duly made within two months. That they did not do, for reasons which we have
already explained.
We conclude in the circumstances that it is the latter meaning of the word
"due" which is correct. The fact that co-incidentally their inefficiency,
purely owing to extraneous factors, did not cause any great delay to Coleman in
his trial is neither here nor there. It does not mean that they have acted
with all due expedition. They have failed to comply with the terms of the Act
which we have read out, simply because they never appreciated that expedition
was required.
It seems accordingly we are obliged by the wording of section 8, as amended, to
decline to give leave to arraign. Consequently this application fails."
25. The court then directed that the court of trial enter a verdict of
acquittal of the offences of burglary and robbery (which had led to a sentence
of 10 years imprisonment) on which the defendant had been ordered to be
re-tried.
26. In opposing the application to extend time within which the arraignment
must take place, and in support of the cross-application by the appellant to
set aside the order for re-trial pursuant to section 8, Mr Ford QC has
submitted as follows. He accepts that the prosecution acted expeditiously in
sending an indictment to the Bristol Crown Court with a covering letter
indicating that the Court of Appeal had ordered re-arraignment within two
months of 10th November 2000. However, he submits that the
prosecution did not discharge its obligations to act expeditiously simply by
submitting an indictment to the Crown Court and requesting an arraignment
within two months of the order for re-trial: see R -v- Horne, The Times,
February 27th 1992 CA; see also R -v- Coleman (above).
27. Mr Ford argues that it should have been a straightforward task to ensure
arraignment within two months of the order of the Court of Appeal and that the
time limit, like any limitation period, should have been placed in an
appropriate diary in the offices of the CPS. He submits that the only reason
the matter was not properly dealt with by a re-arraignment on 18th
December 2000 was because the CPS, not having made any special enquiry, failed
to pick the matter up from the court list delivered by 3.30 p.m. on Friday
15th December. Having, by omission, failed to brief counsel for
that day, the CPS placed counsel instructed at the last moment in a position
where she was applying for an adjournment of the plea and directions hearing
without knowledge of the relevant deadline for re-arraignment. Thus counsel
was not in a position to ask the court for an earlier date than that suggested
by the court of its own motion and agreed to by defence counsel.
28. Mr Ford further submitted that it was no part of the duty of the defence to
assist the prosecution in securing a re-arraignment and that, once the date of
the adjourned hearing had been communicated to the CPS, it still had three
weeks in which to secure re-arraignment within the appropriate time. This
could have been done had the CPS dealt with the case properly and monitored its
progress with appropriate care and attention. In those circumstances, Mr Ford
submitted that the prosecution, far from acting with "all due expedition" had
failed to act with any expedition at all following its submission of the
indictment to the Bristol Crown Court.
29. Mr Mark Evans QC for the CPS submitted that the fact that the case had been
listed at very short notice and not picked up either by the CPS or by
prosecuting counsels' clerk was not a consequence of want of all due
expedition. The case was, in the event, listed for re-arraignment well within
time. Thereafter, it was perfectly reasonable, he argued, for Miss Cassidy to
proceed on the premise that the matter had been before the Court, that the
Court, aware of the deadline from the CPS's letter, had dealt with the case
appropriately and that the position of the retrial was protected. Following
the language of Coleman "reasonable or proper promptness or speed" had
been demonstrated and the CPS had discharged its duty adequately. He also
underlined that the intervening Christmas vacation meant that little working
time was in reality available between the initial and the adjourned hearing.
30. In our view, the words of the Act require the court to be satisfied that
the prosecution has acted with all due expedition (or in the language of
Coleman `reasonable or proper speed') to procure that re-arraignment of
the defendant takes place within the two month period required. In deciding
whether or not that is so in a case where the deadline has been missed, the
court does not look simply at the end result, nor does it conduct a minute
examination of the systems employed in the offices or chambers of those
involved in the prosecution. It simply looks to see whether, within the system
as it ought to operate, reasonably expeditious steps for re-arraignment have
been taken. If, as in Coleman, it appears that the prosecution were
unaware of the existence of the statutory deadline and hence took no steps to
comply with it, there must by definition have been an absence of due
expedition. If, however, the prosecution are aware of the requirement and take
steps, but fail, to comply with the time limit, one looks to see whether the
steps taken were reasonably expeditious, albeit they did not achieve that
result. This involves a broad post mortem of events of the kind which
we have conducted above and a judgment as to the reasonableness of the acts (or
omissions) in all the circumstances.
31. Taking that broad approach, we accept Mr Evans' analysis. It is not in
dispute that, with knowledge of the necessity to re-arraign within two months,
the CPS duly applied for, and obtained, a date. Despite the oversight of the
CPS and prosecuting counsel's chambers in respect of the date listed for
re-arraignment (in respect of which the short notice could really afford no
proper excuse), prosecuting counsel was in fact present upon 18th
December when the events we have described took place before the Recorder.
Whatever the deficiencies in Miss Wilson's instructions (and whether the
failure of the prosecution in this respect could properly be regarded as a lack
of expedition is arguable) it seems plain to us that she at least, as
the representative of the prosecution, was entitled to assume that the date
given for the adjourned hearing was within the deadline. The court had offered
it and defence counsel, who had offered to present the matter to the court, had
assented to that date.
32. That being so, it seems to us that the question simply becomes whether or
not the failure of the CPS following that hearing to check that the adjourned
date was indeed within the deadline amounted to an absence of due
expedition/reasonable promptness in securing the re-arraignment. We consider
that in the particular circumstances and, in particular, the reasonableness of
assuming that the court had been aware of the deadline for re-arraignment,
reasonable expedition has been established on the part of the prosecution.
33. We have considered with care Mr Ford's submission that a proper office
diary system of the type used by solicitors to note limitation dates in
relation to their litigation files should have been, but was not, in place in
the offices of the CPS, ready reference to which would have avoided the error.
It appears that no such system was in operation and it was only by checking the
record in the case file, (which Miss Cassidy failed to do) that the mistake
would have been revealed. That is a point of some force, and no doubt the
offices of the CPS will be well advised to act upon it. Nonetheless, the
question before us is whether or not in this case the prosecution displayed
reasonable or proper expedition to procure re-arraignment. While in broad
terms the reasonableness of the steps taken fall to be judged against the
background of the system in which they operate the focus is upon the actual
steps taken or omitted to be taken to re-arraign this appellant. As we have
already indicated, it seems to us that the steps taken up to 18th
December were indeed expeditious and that, thereafter, although no further
steps were taken, that was so in the reasonable belief (albeit mistaken) that
they were not necessary. It was reasonable of the CPS to assume that the case
had been properly dealt with by the court on that date, and the failure of the
CPS to check that the order made by the court was appropriate does not in all
the circumstances mean that they failed to act with due expedition.
34. Mr Ford did not suggest that there was not a good and sufficient cause for
a retrial in spite of the lapse of time since the order for retrial (the matter
to which the second limb within section 8(1B) of the Act is directed) and we
are satisfied that there is. Thus, the CPS have satisfied the tests set out in
the Act and, for that reason, we have extended the time for re-arraignment to
Friday 16th March 2001, making it clear that it should, in any
event, take place as soon as possible.
35. As will be apparent from the terms of this judgment, there are serious
lessons to be learned by those responsible both for prosecuting and defending
in cases of this nature, as well as by the Court Service, in order to ensure
that the problems with which we have had to grapple in this case do not to
re-occur.
...
(c) must
ensure that the Court is informed of all relevant decisions and legislative
provisions of which he is aware whether the effect is favourable or
unfavourable towards the contention for which he argues;
(d) must bring any procedural irregularity to the attention of the Court
during the hearing and not reserve such matter to be raised on appeal;
..."
© 2001 Crown Copyright
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