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Lawrence Pazder
Lawrence Pazder
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Lawrence Pazder (April 30, 1936 – March 5, 2004) was a Canadian psychiatrist and author. Pazder wrote the discredited biography, Michelle Remembers, published in 1980, with his patient (and eventual wife) Michelle Smith, which claimed to detail satanic ritual abuse.[1]

Key Information

Background

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Pazder was born in Edmonton, Alberta, on April 30, 1936,[2] and completed his undergraduate medical training at the University of Alberta in 1961.[2][3][4] He received a diploma in tropical medicine from the University of Liverpool in 1962,[3] practicing medicine in Nigeria from 1962 to 1964.[2][3][5] Pazder returned to Canada in 1964 and completed his psychiatric training at McGill University in 1968.[2][3][4] During his professional career, Pazder worked at two Victoria, British Columbia hospitals in addition to his private psychiatric practice.[3] Pazder saw patients at his private psychiatric practice in Victoria until his sudden and unexpected death of heart failure in March 2004.[2][3]

Pazder considered himself to be a devout Catholic.[3] As part of his church activities Pazder founded the Anawim Companions Society in Victoria to provide a day home for people in need as a result of poverty.[2] Pazder also had an interest in African religions and religious ceremonies.[3][5][6]

Pazder and his first wife Marylyn had four children together and were married for many years, until he developed a relationship with his patient Michelle Smith. Court documents filed in the divorce proceedings indicated that between March 1977 and June 1979 Pazder disappeared with Smith (co-author of Michelle Remembers) for lengthy periods of time.[3] In 1979 after a rejected attempt at annulment, Pazder divorced his first wife[3] and later married his former patient and co-author, Smith.[3][4]

Pazder died in his home of heart failure on March 4, 2004.[2]

Michelle Remembers and satanic ritual abuse

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In 1973 Pazder first started treating a woman named Michelle Smith in his private psychiatric practice in Victoria.[4][7] In 1976 when Pazder was treating Smith for depression (related to her having had a miscarriage), Smith confided she felt that she had something important to tell him, but could not remember what it was.[3][7] Soon thereafter, Pazder and Smith had a session where Smith allegedly screamed for 25 minutes non-stop and eventually started speaking in the voice of a five-year-old.[4] The book claims that Pazder used hypnosis on Smith to recover memories of alleged satanic ritual abuse, that would have occurred during 1954 and 1955 when Smith was five years old, at the hands of her mother and others, whom Smith alleges were members of a Satanic cult in Victoria.[8] As Pazder believed he was on the verge of uncovering a vast satanic conspiracy, he eventually would spend many hours at a time treating Smith during a 14-month period.[4][7] So convinced of the problem of satanic ritual abuse, Pazder and Smith travelled to the Vatican in 1978 to alert the Catholic church about the previously unknown dangers to children posed by Satanic cults worldwide.[3][7] Pazder and Smith co-authored Michelle Remembers about the chronicles of the therapy sessions and purported recovered memories, using scientifically discredited methods. Michelle Remembers was the first published survivor account of alleged satanic ritual abuse and was a publishing success, earning Pazder and Smith a $100,000 hard-cover advance and $242,000 for paperback rights.[4][5][9]

After the publication of Michelle Remembers, Pazder was considered to be an expert for the topic of satanic ritual abuse.[5] With the sudden development of satanic ritual abuse cases during the 1980s (likely due to the publication of Michelle Remembers), Pazder's supposed expertise was requested. In 1984, Pazder acted as a consultant in the McMartin preschool trial.[3][6] Pazder also appeared on the first major news report on Satanism (broadcast on May 16, 1985), by ABC's television series 20/20.[3][10] In the report titled "The Devil Worshippers", Pazder discussed the clues that he felt indicated satanic practices.[10] Pazder also participated in the first national seminar at which law enforcement were introduced to the satanic ritual abuse of children (in Fort Collins, Colorado, on September 9–12, 1986). Subsequently, Pazder was part of the CCIN (Cult Crime Impact Network) and lectured to police agencies about satanic ritual abuse during the late 1980s along with other speakers such as Mike Warnke.[3] By 1987 Pazder reported that he was spending a third of his time consulting on satanic ritual abuse cases.[6]

Pazder is credited with coining the term 'ritual abuse' to describe the type of abuse that Smith alleged.[5][6] At a professional conference in Richmond, Virginia in 1987, Pazder defined ritual abuse of children as "repeated physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual assaults combined with a systematic use of symbols and secret ceremonies designed to turn a child against itself, family, society and God". Pazder alleged that "the sexual assault has ritualistic meaning and is not for sexual gratification."[11] Pazder claimed that "The pure group of 'orthodox satanists' is never seen or identified in public, yet it is this group of invisible satanists who plant the seeds and encourage all the more visible satanic groups".[12]

Further investigations into the allegations made in Michelle Remembers found no evidence to support them and satanic ritual abuse is considered to be a moral panic.[3][4][6][11][13][14]

References

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from Grokipedia

Lawrence Pazder (April 30, 1936 – March 5, 2004) was a Canadian psychiatrist whose use of hypnosis in treating patient Michelle Smith produced claims of repressed memories of childhood satanic ritual abuse, which they co-authored in the 1980 book Michelle Remembers.
Pazder graduated from the School of Medicine and specialized in at following studies in . He practiced for over four decades in , where he was known locally for his work helping patients, including founding the Anawim Companion Society. A devout Catholic, Pazder positioned himself as knowledgeable on matters during his therapeutic interventions. The publication of Michelle Remembers detailed Smith's alleged experiences of ritual abuse in 1950s Victoria, recovered through fourteen months of hypnosis sessions from 1976 to 1977, but lacked empirical corroboration such as police records or supporting witnesses. Smith's family, including her father and sister, denied the events, and inconsistencies arose, including her documented school attendance during the claimed period of captivity. The book, a commercial success, served as a template for subsequent unsubstantiated satanic abuse narratives and contributed to the 1980s-1990s Satanic Panic, a period of widespread but evidence-free fears of ritualistic child abuse networks. Modern critiques highlight hypnosis-induced suggestibility as a causal factor in generating such false memories, with no verified instances of the described organized satanic cults emerging from the era's investigations.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Lawrence Pazder was born on April 30, 1936, in , , . His early years took place in the context of post-World War II , a period marked by economic recovery and social changes including increased emphasis on and professional aspirations in rural and urban communities alike. Pazder grew up in a Catholic household, reflecting the strong religious traditions prevalent among many Canadian families of the era, particularly those of European descent in Western provinces. This environment emphasized moral absolutes and spiritual frameworks, though specific details about his parents or siblings remain undocumented in . Early indications of interest in healing professions emerged amid broader societal shifts toward medical and psychological fields following wartime traumas.

Academic and Medical Training

Pazder earned his medical degree from the Faculty of Medicine, graduating in 1961. Following , he pursued postgraduate training in , obtaining a diploma from the in 1962 before spending two years practicing medicine in . He subsequently specialized in through residency training at in . Pazder relocated to , where he established a private psychiatric practice by the mid-1970s.

Professional Career

Psychiatric Practice in

Lawrence Pazder established a long-term psychiatric practice in , specializing in general from the mid-1960s onward. He provided clinical services at local hospitals, including Royal Jubilee Hospital and Victoria General Hospital, while also maintaining a private practice within a group of five psychiatrists. As a certified specialist and fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of , Pazder focused on standard diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to disorders, treating patients through outpatient consultations and inpatient care. A devout Catholic, Pazder integrated religious perspectives into his psychiatric framework, occasionally offering consultations on spiritual crises where psychological symptoms intersected with faith-based concerns, such as distinguishing between mental illness and perceived demonic influence within a medical context. This reflected his commitment to holistic patient care, balancing empirical psychiatric methods with acknowledgment of patients' spiritual beliefs, though his routine work emphasized conventional treatments like and prior to high-profile cases.

Pre-1980 Contributions to Psychiatry

Lawrence Pazder completed his medical degree at the in 1961, followed by a diploma in from the in 1962 and two years of practice in . He subsequently specialized in through training at in . Upon relocating to , Pazder established a private psychiatric practice, where his pre-1980 professional activities centered on routine clinical treatment of disorders, including trauma and cases. This work occurred within the context of community-based in , addressing dissociation and related symptoms among patients without documented involvement in research publications or formal medical education roles prior to that period. His Catholic upbringing informed a patient-centered approach that considered religious dimensions in holistic care, though of distinct methodological advancements remains absent from verifiable records.

Collaboration with Michelle Smith

Therapeutic Relationship and Recovered Memories

In 1976, , then married to her first husband, resumed psychiatric treatment with Lawrence Pazder in , seeking help for depression following a . During initial sessions, Smith reported physical discomfort, including , which Pazder attributed to psychosomatic origins potentially linked to repressed trauma. To explore these symptoms, Pazder employed , a technique then commonly used in to access subconscious material, though later research has shown it increases and the risk of rather than reliable recall. Over the subsequent 14 months of intensive therapy from 1976 to 1977, Pazder supplemented hypnosis with sodium amytal, a barbiturate known as "truth serum" and used in the era to induce relaxation and purportedly uncover hidden memories, despite its established limitations in producing accurate testimony due to disinhibition and fantasy incorporation. Smith began "recovering" fragmented recollections of events from her early childhood in 1954–1955, when she was approximately five years old, including alleged involvement in group rituals featuring occult symbols, animal sacrifice, and abuse by family members and others. Pazder documented these sessions meticulously, recording narratives that expanded into elaborate sequences, such as an extended confinement in rituals, while interpreting physical marks on Smith's body—like a scar on her arm—as corroborative evidence of the claimed events. Pazder viewed the emerging memories as genuine repressed trauma, guiding sessions to connect Smith's adult symptoms causally to these purported childhood experiences, without independent verification such as contemporaneous records or corroboration. Empirical scrutiny of similar recovered-memory cases, including those induced by and barbiturates, has since demonstrated high vulnerability to therapist influence, leading organizations like the to caution against their forensic or therapeutic reliability absent external evidence. Smith's family, including her mother, denied the allegations, and archival checks (e.g., school attendance contradicting extended ritual claims) further undermined the accounts' veracity.

Path to Co-Authorship

Following the conclusion of Smith's intensive sessions, which spanned approximately 600 hours from 1976 to 1977 and involved hypnotic regression to uncover purported repressed memories of childhood satanic ritual abuse, Pazder and Smith attempted to corroborate these recollections through external verification efforts, including consultations with local authorities and review of historical records. These attempts yielded no supporting evidence, such as police reports or corroborating witnesses, and Smith's family denied the allegations of involvement in any activities. Despite the lack of empirical validation, Pazder, acting in his capacity as and purported expert validator, decided with Smith to document the memories in book form, framing the narrative as a firsthand account to preserve its authenticity while he provided editorial oversight to shape the raw session transcripts into a coherent structure. Parallel to this literary endeavor, the professional boundaries between Pazder and Smith eroded into a romantic relationship, prompting Pazder to his first wife, Marylyn, and marry Smith in 1980, the same year the book was published. This personal union facilitated closer collaboration on the manuscript, with Pazder emphasizing a first-person perspective from Smith's viewpoint to emphasize the immediacy of the recovered experiences, while integrating interpretive commentary drawn from his psychiatric analysis and consultations with figures, including an ritual he performed on Smith. The decision to pursue publication was influenced by lucrative offers, including a $100,000 advance and substantial rights, reflecting motivations tied to potential financial and public impact rather than resolved evidential concerns.

Michelle Remembers

Book Content and Claims

Michellle Remembers, co-authored by Michelle Smith and Lawrence Pazder and published in 1980, presents a nonfiction account of Smith's alleged experiences of satanic ritual abuse beginning at age five in 1954–1955 in Victoria, British Columbia. The narrative derives from memories reportedly recovered during Pazder's psychiatric therapy sessions with Smith starting in 1977, including hypnosis and sodium amytal interviews, depicting involvement in a secretive satanic cult termed the Church of Satan. Smith claims the cult operated through underground networks, conducting ceremonies in locations such as church basements, cemeteries, and her childhood home's basement, with participation from family members and community figures. Central to the account is Smith's mother, Virginia Christensen, portrayed as a key member who allegedly prostituted her daughter to Satanists and forced her participation in rituals involving and . Specific abuses described include prolonged physical and sexual torment, such as placement in a cage with snakes and spiders, starvation, dehydration, insertion of needles and electrodes, forced consumption of feces, urine, and blood from dismembered animals and newborns, and alive in Ross Bay Cemetery followed by a "rebirth" ceremony requiring the killing of kittens. The narrative culminates in an 81-day "Feast of the Beast" ritual featuring human and animal sacrifices, ritual murders, and an initiation demanding finger removal, during which purportedly manifested in smoke or vapor form and marked Smith's arm. Supernatural elements feature prominently, with claims of divine intervention by the Virgin Mary and to counter Satan's influence, including the removal of scars and suppression of memories post-ritual. The book references artifacts like a containing baby bones hidden beneath Smith's family home and photographs purportedly capturing Satanic apparitions or divine visitations. An by a Catholic is also described as part of the therapeutic recovery process. The authors assert these events reveal a pervasive, intergenerational satanic threat embedded in society.

Publication and Initial Reception

Michele Remembers was published in 1980 by Times Books, a division of , presenting itself as a nonfiction account of Michelle Smith's recovered memories of childhood satanic ritual abuse under the guidance of psychiatrist . The book achieved rapid commercial success, becoming a national bestseller and selling hundreds of thousands of copies in its initial years, fueled by sensational subject matter amid growing public interest in and threats. Its launch was amplified by media interviews with Pazder and Smith, which highlighted the dramatic elements of the narrative, including alleged ritualistic horrors and interventions. In May 1989, Smith appeared on alongside another purported survivor, , drawing an audience of millions and reigniting interest nearly a decade after publication. Among therapists, the book gained traction as an early template for exploring and ritual trauma, with practitioners citing it in sessions to validate patients' emerging recollections of similar experiences. Religious groups, especially evangelicals, embraced its claims as corroboration of against satanic influences, incorporating excerpts into sermons and warnings about hidden cult activities. Initial journalistic responses included skepticism from outlets questioning the absence of corroborating evidence for specific events, such as the alleged rituals, yet the narrative's emotional appeal overshadowed these critiques in popular and professional adoption.

Role in Satanic Ritual Abuse Discourse

Promotion of SRA Allegations

Following the 1980 publication of , Pazder positioned himself as an authority on satanic ritual abuse (SRA), conducting workshops and seminars for therapists, personnel, and religious groups to identify symptoms such as dissociation and recovered memories of ritualistic trauma. These sessions often drew on the book's narrative as a diagnostic template, instructing participants to probe for indicators of organized satanic cults involving , , and indoctrination, which Pazder attributed to underlying . He emphasized causal mechanisms where repressed memories surfaced through and sodium amytal therapy, linking SRA experiences to fragmented personalities and long-term psychological harm in patients. Pazder's consultations extended to law enforcement agencies across , where he advised on investigating alleged ritual abuse networks, framing patient disclosures as of widespread, covert satanic operations rather than or suggestion. In media appearances, including television programs like A Current Affair, he presented SRA as a verifiable clinical derived from multiple patient reports, cautioning against skepticism that dismissed dissociation-linked recollections as fantasy. Collaborations with religious organizations amplified Pazder's advocacy, as he integrated psychiatric insights with theological interpretations of demonic influence, asserting that SRA cults exploited spiritual vulnerabilities to induce dissociative states mimicking possession. These efforts, spanning the early 1980s, trained hundreds in recognizing purported SRA markers, influencing protocols for interviewing victims and corroborating abuse claims through behavioral and symptomatic patterns described in his therapeutic model.

Consultations and Public Influence

Following the publication of Michelle Remembers, Pazder emerged as a prominent consultant on alleged satanic ritual abuse (SRA) cases, advising on dozens of such allegations starting in 1983. He provided guidance to law enforcement, mental health professionals, and social workers through speaking tours and seminars focused on identifying and investigating SRA, which proliferated across North America in the 1980s. These engagements positioned him as a key figure in disseminating protocols for handling suspected ritualistic abuse, often incorporating elements from his therapeutic approach, such as hypnosis and integration of religious rituals. Pazder's advisory input extended to criminal investigations in and the , where he weighed in on claims of organized abuse, sometimes leading to prosecutions of individuals later questioned in their guilt. Drawing from Catholic traditions, he advocated for interventions blending psychiatric evaluation with spiritual elements, as demonstrated in his own practice involving priestly blessings and exorcistic rites for patients reporting ritual trauma. In public presentations to police and clinicians, he asserted the existence of verifiable SRA networks characterized as multigenerational and systematically evil, while claiming expertise to differentiate authentic cases from hoaxes—expressing doubt about most allegations beyond his primary one and select others. His broader influence shaped 1980s and 1990s therapeutic practices, with functioning as a foundational reference cited in thousands of SRA claims worldwide. Therapists adopted the book's narrative elements as a checklist for eliciting similar recovered memories, amplifying the discourse on ritual abuse through professional training and media exposure. This dissemination reinforced Pazder's role in framing SRA as a credible, widespread requiring specialized intervention.

Controversies and Criticisms

Scientific and Empirical Scrutiny of Claims

Investigations into allegations of organized Satanic ritual abuse (SRA), including those popularized by Pazder's work, have consistently failed to uncover physical or corroborative evidence of multigenerational cults engaging in ritualistic child abuse. In a 1992 report by FBI behavioral science unit supervisor Kenneth V. Lanning, an analysis of over 300 reported cases revealed no credible indicators of structured satanic networks, such as bodies, ritual sites, or artifacts consistent with the claims; instead, allegations often stemmed from unsubstantiated adult recollections without forensic support. Lanning noted that despite extensive law enforcement scrutiny, including searches for the predicted high volume of victims and evidence from supposed mass sacrifices, no such organized activity was substantiated, attributing persistence of claims to behavioral and psychological dynamics rather than empirical reality. The therapeutic techniques employed by Pazder, including and sodium amytal interviews to "recover" Smith's memories, have been empirically linked to the creation of false memories. Research by psychologist demonstrates that hypnosis increases suggestibility and confidence in fabricated details, often blending imagined events with real ones, while sodium amytal—a known as ""—does not reliably elicit accurate recall and can induce under leading questioning. Experimental studies show subjects exposed to suggestive or drug-assisted probing incorporating later "remember" events that never occurred, with error rates exceeding 25% for high-confidence recollections; this mechanism aligns with critiques of , where external cues from therapists shape narratives of abuse. Applied to , the absence of contemporaneous records verifying claimed events, such as specific hospital stays or artifacts, further undermines the accounts as products of therapeutic influence rather than veridical history. Proponents of SRA validity, including some clinicians treating , cite patterns in patient testimonies as indirect evidence. A 1991 study of 37 adults with reported consistent themes of childhood ritual abuse by purported satanic groups, including physical markers like scars and shared symbolic motifs across unrelated cases, interpreted by authors as suggestive of a genuine clinical syndrome beyond coincidence. Advocates argue these reports correlate with elevated dissociation scores and trauma histories in multiple personality disorder (now ) populations, positing repressed memories as a protective mechanism against overwhelming abuse; however, such findings rely on uncorroborated self-reports without external validation, and subsequent analyses have attributed them to iatrogenic effects from belief-laden therapy rather than causal proof of events. No peer-reviewed studies have established causal links between these testimonies and verifiable SRA occurrences, contrasting with the evidentiary void in physical traces.

Ethical and Professional Repercussions

Pazder's therapeutic engagement with transitioned into a personal romantic relationship, leading to his from his first wife Marylyn in the late and his to Smith following the publication of in 1980. This development constituted a dual relationship, contravening established psychiatric ethical standards that prohibit therapists from engaging in romantic or sexual involvements with current or recent patients to prevent exploitation, impaired judgment, and power imbalances. The Canadian Psychiatric Association's code of ethics, aligned with principles from bodies like the College of Physicians and Surgeons of where Pazder practiced, similarly emphasizes maintaining professional boundaries and avoiding conflicts of interest that could compromise patient welfare. Co-authorship of with Smith further exemplified these boundary concerns, as therapists publishing accounts derived from patient sessions risk influencing recollections through suggestion and blurring therapeutic objectivity with collaborative narrative construction. Critics, including skeptics and professionals, argued this arrangement violated principles of and non-exploitation, potentially prioritizing personal or ideological validation over clinical detachment. No formal disciplinary actions, license suspensions, or revocations against Pazder were documented by regulatory bodies such as the College of Physicians and Surgeons of , despite the inherent conflicts. Pazder maintained that the recovered memories and ensuing bond reflected authentic spiritual recovery rather than procedural impropriety, framing the relationship as a mutual affirmation of Smith's autonomy and shared Catholic worldview over rigid secular protocols. This perspective, echoed in the book's preface, positioned therapeutic outcomes as transcending conventional ethics when aligned with perceived divine truth, though it drew rebuttals from ethicists emphasizing empirical safeguards against transference and dependency. The absence of lawsuits or official complaints from patients or peers underscores a lack of institutionalized accountability at the time, amid broader 1980s debates on recovered memory therapy's oversight.

Legacy and Later Life

Personal Developments and Marriage

In 1980, following the publication of Michelle Remembers, Pazder divorced his first wife and married his former patient, Michelle Smith, with whom he had developed a romantic relationship during her therapy. The couple, who resided in Victoria, British Columbia, where Pazder maintained his psychiatric practice, had no children together. As a devout Catholic, Pazder's personal faith shaped aspects of his private life, including his worldview amid the public attention from the book, though he kept family matters largely out of the spotlight. The marriage endured until his death, reflecting a stable personal partnership formed in the wake of professional notoriety.

Death and Posthumous Assessments

Lawrence Pazder died of a myocardial infarction on March 5, 2004, at his home in Victoria, British Columbia, at the age of 67. His obituary in The Times Colonist described the passing as sudden and peaceful, emphasizing his professional stature as a psychiatrist without referencing controversies surrounding his work. Immediate posthumous notices, primarily from family and professional circles, portrayed him as a respected clinician and fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, reflecting a focus on his clinical career rather than public debates. Michelle Smith, his wife since their marriage in 1990, survived him and continued private advocacy for ritual abuse awareness in select religious contexts, though she largely withdrew from broader public engagement after his death.

Enduring Impact on Memory Therapy and Cultural Narratives

The publication of Michelle Remembers in 1980 contributed to the 1990s "memory wars" in by popularizing the concept of recovered repressed memories of childhood satanic ritual abuse (SRA), which encouraged therapeutic practices aimed at eliciting such recollections through and suggestive interviewing techniques. These methods, later scrutinized in empirical studies, demonstrated high susceptibility to implantation, as evidenced by experiments showing that 20-30% of participants could be led to "recall" entirely fabricated events like being lost in a mall as children. The book's narrative served as a template for thousands of similar claims during the 1980s-1990s SRA , involving over 12,000 unsubstantiated allegations across daycare centers and families, often resulting in disrupted lives and legal proceedings without physical or independent corroboration. This influence extended to high-profile cases like the (1983-1990), the longest and most expensive criminal trial in U.S. history, where initial abuse accusations escalated to include ritualistic elements echoing , such as animal sacrifices and underground tunnels; all charges were ultimately dropped or acquitted due to lack of evidence and prosecutorial overreach, highlighting how SRA-inspired recovered memory testimony fueled wrongful investigations. Psychological consensus, informed by replicable research on memory malleability, has since rejected widespread repressed SRA as a verifiable phenomenon, attributing most claims to under therapeutic suggestion rather than causal historical events, though mainstream institutions initially amplified these narratives amid cultural anxieties over . Culturally, Pazder's work persists in modern conspiracy movements like , which recycles SRA motifs—elite cabals trafficking children for ritualistic purposes—without empirical validation, perpetuating a cycle of unsubstantiated fears that echo the panic's false positives while potentially diverting attention from documented, non-ritualistic abuses in isolated fringe groups. Empirical dismissals in peer-reviewed literature emphasize that, absent forensic evidence for organized satanic networks, the dominant legacy is an iatrogenic harm: an of therapist-induced pseudomemories that eroded trust in genuine trauma reporting, though rare, verifiable abuses in cults underscore the need to distinguish causal realities from suggestion-driven artifacts without presuming institutional narratives' neutrality.

References

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