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Date: 20070116

Docket: IMM-3048-06

Citation: 2007 FC 43

Edmonton, Alberta, January 16, 2007

PRESENT:     The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish

 

 

BETWEEN:

MIKHAIL ALEXANDER LENNIKOV

 IRINA LENNIKOVA AND

 DIMITRI (DMITRI) LENNIKOV

Applicants

and

 

THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP

 AND IMMIGRATION

Respondent

 

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT

 

[1]               Mikhail Alexander Lennikov and his wife and child are all Russian citizens.  The family’s application for permanent residency in Canada was refused because an immigration officer formed the opinion that Mr. Lennikov was inadmissible to Canada because of his past employment with the KGB. 

 

[2]               This finding was confirmed by the Immigration Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board, which found that Mr. Lennikov had been a member of a group that had engaged in acts of espionage or subversion against a democratic government, institution or process, and was thus inadmissible to Canada.  Mr. Lennikov’s wife and child were also found to be inadmissible, as his accompanying family members.

 

[3]               The applicants now seek judicial review of the Immigration Division’s decision, asserting that the Board committed a number of errors in coming to the conclusion that Mr. Lennikov had been a member of a group that had engaged in acts of espionage against a democratic government or institution.  For the reasons that follow, I am not persuaded that the Board erred as alleged, and accordingly, the application will be dismissed.

 

Background

[4]                Mr. Lennikov attended the Far Eastern State University in the former U.S.S.R.  He was enrolled in the Department of Oriental Studies, where he specialized in the Japanese language.

 

[5]               While attending university, Mr. Lennikov worked part-time as an interpreter for “Intourist”, a government agency providing tours to foreign tourists. He was also the leader of Kom So Mol, a Communist Youth League.

 

[6]               Mr. Lennikov traveled to Japan in October of 1981, as part of a Kom So Mol tour. Shortly before he left for Japan, Mr. Lennikov was approached for the first time by a KGB agent, a man who he identifies only as “Maximov”.  Maximov asked Mr. Lennikov to provide character references for the students in his class, all of whom were studying either the Chinese or Japanese language.  Character references such as that sought from Mr. Lennikov were evidently used by the KGB to determine whether individuals should be allowed to travel abroad.

 

[7]               Mr. Lennikov says that providing this sort of information was part of his role as a student leader at the university.

 

[8]               Before Mr. Lennikov left for Japan, he says that Maximov asked him to keep a lookout for anything of note that he observed while in that country.  Mr. Lennikov says that he met many Japanese people during the trip, and that they gave him their business cards.

 

[9]               When Mr. Lennikov returned from his trip to Japan, he met with Maximov, and gave him the business cards of the Japanese businessmen that he had met, because, he says, he really had nothing of any value to give to him.

 

[10]            Maximov was evidently very interested in the activities of the Japanese police while they were on board the Russian students’ ship, while it was docked in Japanese ports.  He was also interested in a Mr. Sato, a socialist member of the Japanese Parliament that the group had met. Mr. Lennikov says that he had only met Mr. Sato briefly, and couldn’t provide much information about him.

 

[11]           Maximov contacted Mr. Lennikov again after he had graduated from the Far Eastern State University, and advised him that he had sent a request to the Employment Distribution Commission to have Mr. Lennikov hired by the KGB. This request was accepted and Mr. Lennikov began work for the KGB in August of 1982.

 

[12]           Mr. Lennikov says that although he did not want to go to work for the KGB, he felt that he had no choice.  While he did not fear for his personal safety, he felt that his career and his ability to travel outside the U.S.S.R. would have been compromised had he declined the KGB’s offer of employment.

 

[13]           Mr. Lennikov ultimately went to work as an officer in the First Department in the Japanese Section in the KGB’s Vladivostok office, with the rank of Lieutenant. The First Department was responsible for monitoring Japanese businessmen who were visiting the Soviet Union. Mr. Lennikov’s responsibilities included the translation of Japanese documents and maintaining contact with two or three informants who were students of the Oriental Studies Department at the Far Eastern State University. 

 

[14]           In addition, Mr. Lennikov was involved in assessing prospective informants in Japan, providing opinions as to their reliability.

 

[15]            In 1984, as part of his duties with the KGB, Mr. Lennikov travelled to Sapporo, Japan, with the local Governor.  Mr. Lennikov acted as an interpreter during the trip, but says that he did not perform any intelligence work while in Japan.

 

[16]           Mr. Lennikov was then promoted to Senior Lieutenant.  Although he was progressing with his career, Mr. Lennikov was not happy in his position, and in 1985, he drafted a report requesting that he be transferred to the Second Department of the KGB, which was involved in Counterintelligence. Mr. Lennikov says that this report embarrassed the acting head of the First Department, and that he was forced to withdraw the request.  In exchange for withdrawing the report, Mr. Lennikov says that he was offered long overdue training.

 

[17]           In 1986, Mr. Lennikov began trying to leave the KGB, taking a position as assistant for international relations for the Governor of the province of Primorye.  While working for the Governor, Mr. Lennikov remained a KGB employee, and he continued to gather personal information from students at the university for the KGB.

 

[18]           When the head of the First Department in Vladivostok was replaced in 1986, Mr. Lennikov asked to leave the KGB, requesting a full transfer to the Governor’s office.  He did not receive a response to this request.  However, in 1987 he was promoted to the rank of Captain.

 

[19]           In 1988, Mr. Lennikov was recalled to the local KGB office.  Very unhappy with his situation, he drafted a report to his superiors in which he outlined why it was that he was not suitable for employment within the KGB. When the head of the First Department was on leave, Mr. Lennikov submitted his report to the head of Personnel. By November of 1988, he had been dismissed from the KGB on the grounds that he was incapable of service.

 

[20]           Mr. Lennikov worked in a variety of other positions after leaving the KGB.  However, he understood that he was viewed as a traitor for having embarrassed the KGB. Concerned for his safety and that of his family, in 1995 Mr. Lennikov and his family left Russia for Japan, where Mr. Lennikov spent a couple of years conducting research.

 

[21]           In 1997, Mr. Lennikov was accepted at the University of British Columbia, and moved with his family to Vancouver, entering Canada on a study permit.

 

[22]           In April of 1999, the family filed their application for permanent residence in Canada.  In conjunction with this application, Mr. Lennikov and his family attended for an interview with an Immigration Officer.  After the interview, the officer determined that Mr. Lennikov was inadmissible to Canada as a result of his previous employment with the KGB.

 

[23]           Mr. Lennikov then underwent further interviews, which resulted in a report being prepared under the provisions of subsection 44(2) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27.  The matter was then referred to the Immigration Division for an admissibility hearing.

 

The Immigration Division’s Decision

[24]           The Immigration Division identified the two questions that it was required to address as firstly, whether there were reasonable grounds to believe that the KGB was an organization which had engaged in an act of espionage against a democratic government, institution or process, as these terms are understood in Canada.  In the event that the Board concluded that this was indeed the case, it then had to determine whether there were reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Lennikov had been a member of that organization, within the meaning of paragraph 34(1)(f) of IRPA.

 

[25]           The Board commenced its analysis by considering the standard of proof to be applied in section 34, holding that “reasonable grounds to believe” required “more than a flimsy suspicion”. This was a low threshold, less than the civil test of the balance of probabilities, according to the Board.

 

[26]           There was no issue before the Board about the fact that the KGB was an organization that had engaged in acts of espionage against democratic governments, institutions or processes.  The Board recognized, however, that the KGB had a complex operational structure, which, with some minor differences, was replicated in the provinces across the Soviet Union.

 

[27]           The Board relied on a variety of sources for a definition of espionage, including the decision in Qu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2002] 3 F.C. 3, 2001 FCA 399 and the former Official Secrets Act.  Applying this definition, the Board found that not only was the First Chief Directorate of the KGB in Moscow involved in espionage (which both parties conceded) but that the KGB “in its entirety” was actively involved in espionage.

 

[28]           The Board found that the KGB was a “state within a state”. This conclusion was based on the documentary evidence, which, among other things, indicated that the raison d’être of the KGB, at all levels, was to protect the dictatorship of the USSR by gathering information internally and externally for the sole target of state consolidation.

 

[29]           Turning to Mr. Lennikov’s membership in the KGB, the Board considered his allegation that he was forced to work for the KGB and could not safely refuse to join the organization due to the consequences to his personal life and career, as well as the Minister’s assertion that he was not coerced to join the KGB, and that had he declined the offer of employment, he would have suffered no harm.

 

[30]           In rejecting Mr. Lennikov’s claim of coercion, the Board noted that he had testified that he did not really fear for his life, but more for his career prospects.

 

[31]           The Board also observed that Mr. Lennikov had an extensive knowledge of the KGB.  Moreover, despite his attempts to minimize his contribution to the organization, both the documentary evidence and common sense dictated that he must have known that the information that he gathered was being used by the KGB for espionage purposes.

 

[32]           While the evidence did not necessarily indicate that Mr. Lennikov committed acts of espionage himself, the Board found that it was clear that he was at least complicit in such acts during his years of service with the KGB.

 

[33]           The Board also rejected Mr. Lennikov’s characterization of his duties as simply administrative in nature. While he may not have received training in espionage techniques, he was given complex files to deal with, including the translation of documents, the supervision of student informants, and the collection of information regarding Japanese businessmen.

 

[34]           Furthermore, Mr. Lennikov benefited from several promotions within the KGB, despite allegedly having intentionally caused turmoil by requesting transfers and requesting to leave the organization.  The Board also noted that Mr. Lennikov had maintained his contacts in the KGB after having left the organization.

 

[35]           Finally, the Board noted that despite the circumstances allegedly surrounding Mr. Lennikov’s departure from the KGB in 1988, his Work Book nonetheless indicated that he continued to work for the Soviet government until 1991.  Moreover, he participated in government joint ventures, and returned on a university exchange from Japan to teach at the Orient Studies University at Vladivostok from 1994 to 1997.

[36]           There was also no evidence that either Mr. Lennikov or his family suffered any harm as a result of his departure from the KGB in the eight years before he came to Canada.

 

[37]           The Board therefore concluded that Mr. Lennikov was a person described in paragraph 34(1)(f) of IRPA, and a deportation order was issued. Mr. Lennikov’s wife and son were also made subject to deportation orders, as Mr. Lennikov’s accompanying family members.

 

Legislative Framework

[38]           The Board’s inadmissibility finding was made under the provisions of section 34 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, the relevant portions of which provide that:

34. (1) A permanent resident or a foreign national is inadmissible on security grounds for

 

(a) engaging in an act of espionage or an act of subversion against a democratic government, institution or process as they are understood in Canada;

 

… or

 

(f) being a member of an organization that there are reasonable grounds to believe engages, has engaged or will engage in acts referred to in paragraph (a), (b) or (c).

34. (1) Emportent interdiction de territoire pour raison de sécurité les faits suivants :

 

 

a) être l’auteur d’actes d’espionnage ou se livrer à la subversion contre toute institution démocratique, au sens où cette expression s’entend au Canada;

 

 

f) être membre d’une organisation dont il y a des motifs raisonnables de croire qu’elle est, a été ou sera l’auteur d’un acte visé aux alinéas a), b) ou c).

 

 

[39]           In making its finding under section 34 of the Act, the Board is guided by section 33 of IRPA, which provides that:

33. The facts that constitute inadmissibility under sections 34 to 37 include facts arising from omissions and, unless otherwise provided, include facts for which there are reasonable grounds to believe that they have occurred, are occurring or may occur.

33. Les faits — actes ou omissions — mentionnés aux articles 34 à 37 sont, sauf disposition contraire, appréciés sur la base de motifs raisonnables de croire qu’ils sont survenus, surviennent ou peuvent survenir.

 

 

General Observations Regarding the Standard of Review

[40]           After carrying out a pragmatic and functional analysis, the Federal Court of Appeal in Poshteh v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 3 F.C.R. 487, 2005 FCA 85, found that the Immigration Division has expertise in fact-finding which requires great deference to its findings of fact.  I interpret this to mean that such findings are to be reviewed against a standard of patent unreasonableness.

 

[41]           Moreover, the Federal Court of Appeal also found that questions of mixed fact and law, including those involving legal questions relating to the interpretation of the term ‘member’ are entitled to some deference, and should be reviewed against the standard of reasonableness.

 

[42]           I will return to consider the applicable standard of review governing each of the issues raised by Mr. Lennikov, in the context of my discussion of those issues.

 

The Reasonable Grounds to Believe Standard

[43]           Before turning to consider the arguments advanced by Mr. Lennikov, however, it is helpful to first have an understanding of the standard of proof required to establish inadmissibility under section 34 of IRPAThat is, what does “reasonable grounds to believe” mean?

[44]           In Mugasera v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) [2005] 2 S.C.R. 100, [2005] S.C.J. No. 39, 2005 SCC 40, the Supreme Court of Canada held that the "reasonable grounds to believe" standard requires something more than mere suspicion, but less than the standard applicable in civil matters of proof on the balance of probabilities: see ¶114.

 

[45]           With this understanding of the applicable standard, I turn now to consider Mr. Lennikov’s arguments.

 

The KGB as a Monolithic Institution

[46]           While conceding that the First Chief Directorate of the KGB was indeed engaged in espionage, Mr. Lennikov says that the Board erred in treating the KGB as a monolithic organization, whose entire focus was on espionage-related activities.  According to Mr. Lennikov, if this were the case, anyone who had ever worked for the KGB, in whatever capacity, would be inadmissible under the provisions of paragraph 34(1)(f) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act

 

[47]           Mr. Lennikov points out that the KGB was the state security apparatus of the former Soviet Union, and performed many legitimate governmental functions relating to the security of the State, such as border security and the regulation of immigration, in addition to its espionage activities.

 

[48]           In support of Mr. Lennikov’s contention that the Board erred in failing to properly consider whether the department that he worked for in the KGB’s Vladivostok office was itself actually engaged in espionage, he points to the decision of Member Nupponen in Person Concerned v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, Decision A4-00550.  In that case the Board conducted a careful analysis of the evidence relating to the activities of the KGB, concluding that it would be inappropriate to characterize the entire KGB organization as one engaged in espionage, without a real analysis of precisely what it was that the individual in question did within the organization.

 

[49]           The determination of whether an organization is one described in subsection 34(1) of IRPA has previously been reviewed by this Court on the standard of reasonableness: see, for example Kanendra v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 923, [2005] F.C.J. No. 1156 at ¶12 (F.C.), where the Court adopted the pragmatic and functional analysis conducted by Justice Rothstein, then of the Federal Court of Appeal in the Poshteh matter referred to above.

 

[50]           The question, then, is whether the findings of the Board in this regard are supported by reasons that will withstand a somewhat probing examination: see Canada (Director of Investigation and Research, Competition Act) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748, 144 D.L.R. (4th) 1 at ¶ 56).

 

[51]           A review of the documentary evidence reveals that the central KGB organization was divided into a series of Directorates, each with different responsibilities.  In this regard, it will be recalled that Mr. Lennikov conceded that the First Chief Directorate of the KGB was indeed engaged in espionage. 

 

[52]           The Board also found that the structure of the central KGB was mirrored in the provinces, with some modifications in the nomenclature of the component parts of the provincial branches.  By way of example, the Board noted that the term “Directorate” was used at the central level, whereas the term “Department” was used in the provinces.

 

[53]            In this regard, it bears repeating that Mr. Lennikov worked in the First Department in the Japanese Section in the KGB’s Vladivostok office.

 

[54]           The Board carefully reviewed the documentary evidence in coming to its conclusion that “the KGB was dedicated to the consolidation and expansion of the USSR in its entirety, that espionage within the meaning of the inadmissibility section was a regular source of information gathering and that not only the First Directorate in Moscow was involved in acts of espionage”.

 

[55]           This finding was amply supported by the documentary evidence before the Board, including documents provided by Mr. Lennikov himself.  What Mr. Lennikov takes issue with is the weight that the Board attributed to the documentary evidence, and the fact that the presiding member in this case weighed the evidence differently than did Member Nupponen in the case relied upon by Mr. Lennikov.

 

[56]           It is not the task of the Court on judicial review to re-weigh the evidence that was before the Board.  In this case, there was evidence before the Board that reasonably supported its finding with respect to the nature of the KGB as an organization, and I see no basis for interfering with that conclusion.

 

[57]           Moreover, the evidence before the Board amply demonstrates that however the KGB may have been structured, the work that Mr. Lennikov himself did, such as the recruiting of informants in Japan, and passing information on to the First Directorate with respect to prospective informants directly related to espionage.

 

[58]           The Board did not accept that Mr. Lennikov was unaware of the use that was made of the information that he passed on to the First Directorate.  This is a finding of fact, and as such is entitled to considerable deference.  On the basis of the documentary record before the Board, and the fact that Mr. Lennikov demonstrated a substantial knowledge of the KGB organization, I am satisfied that the Board’s finding in this regard was entirely reasonable.

 

The Complicity Analysis Argument

[59]           Mr. Lennikov submits that the Board erred in applying the concept of complicity, as it has been developed in the context of Article 1F of the United Nations’ Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees to the issue of membership in an organization, within the meaning of paragraph 34(1)(f) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

 

[60]           According to Mr. Lennikov, the use of a complicity analysis in cases under section 34 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act would broaden the ambit of the section to such an extent that, for instance, any American working for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, whether as a border guard, secretary or accountant, would be inadmissible to Canada.

 

[61]           At the outset, it should be noted that there is jurisprudence of this Court to the effect that the case law defining complicity that has evolved in the context of exclusion cases, applies equally to at least one of the inadmissibility provisions of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act: see Zazai v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 2 F.C.R. 78, 2004 FC 1356, at ¶ 49, aff’d, 2005 FCA 303.  See also Murillo v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2002] 3 F.C. 287, 2002 FCT 1240.

 

[62]           As the Federal Court of Appeal observed at paragraph 13 of Zazai, complicity is not a crime per se, but is rather is a mode of committing a crime.  With this in mind, it is perhaps noteworthy that both Zazai and Murillo dealt with inadmissibility findings made under section 35 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, or its predecessor section under the Immigration Act, based upon the applicants’ involvement in crimes against humanity.  In contrast, this case relates to section 34 of the Act, dealing with inadmissibility on security grounds. 

 

[63]           That said, I am not required to make a blanket determination as to whether, as a matter of law, a complicity-type analysis is appropriate for use in determining whether an individual is a member of an organization that has engaged in acts of espionage against a democratic government or institution. 

 

[64]           This is because in this case, it was Mr. Lennikov himself who put the matter in issue, having argued before the Immigration Division that he should not be found to have been a member of an organization engaged in espionage because he had been forced to work for the KGB against his will, and had not done so voluntarily. 

 

[65]           In assessing the credibility of Mr. Lennikov’s evidence in this regard, it seems to me to have been entirely reasonable for the Board to have examined the circumstances surrounding his employment with the KGB, the nature of his duties while he was employed by the organization, whether or not it was open to him to leave the KGB, and whether he did so at the first reasonable opportunity.

 

[66]           In other words, having put the voluntariness of his involvement directly in issue in this case, it is not now open to Mr. Lennikov to argue that the Board erred in considering factors relevant to that question.

 

[67]           Before leaving this issue, I should also observe that the Board’s findings with respect to the circumstances surrounding Mr. Lennikov’s joining and leaving the KGB were amply supported by the evidence before it, in particular by Mr. Lennikov’s own admissions.  In this regard, I am satisfied that it was indeed reasonably open to the Board to find that Mr. Lennikov was not coerced, such that his activities could not be considered to have been voluntary.

 

Did the Board Err in Finding that the Japanese businessmen were Members of a Trade or Commercial Association?

 

[68]           Mr. Lennikov submits that the Board erred in finding that the Japanese businessmen that Mr. Lennikov met with during his visit to Japan were members of a trade or commercial association, which qualifies as a democratic institution under section 34(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, as that term has been interpreted in decisions such as that of the Federal Court of Appeal in Qu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), previously cited, at para. 46.

 

[69]           It is not necessary to consider this issue in any detail, as whether or not the Japanese businessmen were members of an association that qualifies as a democratic institution within the meaning of section 34 of Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, given Mr. Lennikov’s own admission that he provided information used to recruit KGB informants in Japan

 

The Fairness Issue

[70]           Finally, Mr. Lennikov submits that it was unfair for the Board to rely on a finding that he himself was engaged in espionage, given the Minister’s position before the Board that it was not being alleged that Mr. Lennikov was himself actively engaged in espionage within the meaning of subsection 34(1)(a) of IRPA, but only that he was a member of an organization engaged in espionage within the meaning of subsection 34(1)(f).

 

[71]           Questions of procedural fairness are to be reviewed against a standard of correctness.  That is, it is not necessary to go through a pragmatic and functional analysis in relation to a question of procedural fairness – it is for the Court to determine whether the procedure that was followed in a given case was fair or not, having regard to all of the relevant circumstances: Sketchley v. Canada (Attorney General), [2005] F.C.J. No. 2056, 2005 FCA 404, at ¶ 52-53.

 

[72]           While it is true that the Board did make passing comments in its decision with respect to Mr. Lennikov’s own direct involvement in espionage activities, at the end of the day, the Board’s finding was that Mr. Lennikov was inadmissible under subsection 34(1)(f) of the Act.  Moreover, the Board’s analysis was always framed in terms of Mr. Lennikov’s involvement in an organization involved in espionage.

 

[73]           No finding was made under subsection 34(1)(a) in relation to Mr. Lennikov.  Indeed, the Board specifically recognized that the evidence before it may not have been sufficient to support a finding under this provision. 

 

[74]           In these circumstances, I am not persuaded that there was a breach of procedural fairness on the part of the Board.

 

Conclusion

[75]           For these reasons, the application for judicial review is dismissed.

 

Certification

[76]           Mr. Lennikov has proposed a question for certification relating to the appropriateness of the Board’s complicity analysis.  As was noted above, the Board’s analysis was responsive to the argument advanced by Mr. Lennikov himself to the effect that he should not be held to account for his work with the KGB because of the involuntary nature of that involvement. 

 

[77]           Given that my decision with respect to the appropriateness of the Board’s consideration of complicity-type factors does not determine the appropriateness of this type of analysis as a matter of general principle, but is confined to the specific facts of this case, I am not persuaded that the question is an appropriate one for certification, and I decline to certify it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

JUDGMENT

 

THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:

 

 

1.         This application for judicial review is dismissed; and

 

 

2.         No serious question of general importance is certified.

 

 

 

“Anne Mactavish”

Judge


FEDERAL COURT

 

 NAMES OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD

 

 

DOCKET:                                          IMM-3048-06

 

 

STYLE OF CAUSE:                          MIKHAIL ALEXANDER LENNIKOV ET AL v.

                                                            THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION

 

 

PLACE OF HEARING:                    Vancouver, British Columbia

 

 

DATE OF HEARING:                      November 9, 2006

 

 

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

 AND JUDGMENT:                         The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish      

 

 

DATED:                                             January 16, 2007         

 

 

 

APPEARANCES:

 

Mr. Darryl Larson                                                                    FOR THE APPLICANT

 

Mr. Peter Bell                                                                           FOR THE RESPONDENT

 

 

 

SOLICITORS OF RECORD:

 

EMBARKATION LAW GROUP                                                                            

Vancouver, B.C.                                                                      FOR THE APPLICANT

                                                                                               

                                                                              JOHN H. SIMS, Q.C.

                                                                              Deputy Attorney General of Canada

Too                                                                        Vancouver, B.C.    FOR RESPONDENT

                                                                                                 

 

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