Execution of K!imberly McC@rthy: True crime, last meal, and final words

Welcome to Hidden Exikuschen, the channel where real stories are told. Stories that go beyond headlines. Stories that stay with you long after the screen turns off. If you are new here, subscribe right now. It’s free and means a lot to this channel. Make yourself comfortable because the Today’s story begins with the most common in the world, a cup of sugar and ends in a place that no one in that Quiet Texas street you never imagined.
There is a type of danger that does not seem danger at all. It doesn’t have a face terrifying. It comes with no warning, no shadow, no a cold feeling in the stomach. It arrives in the middle of any afternoon from a direction that never you imagined comes from someone you already know, someone who have you spoken to before, someone whose face is so familiar to you that as soon as he knocks on your door he doesn’t even You think twice before opening.
that It is the most dangerous type of danger in the world. world. And in Lancaster, Texas, in the summer of 1997, That danger had a name. Lancaster is a quiet town, those where people know each other and care for each other each other. It is located about 24 km south of Dallas, close enough to the city to feel its energy, but gentle enough to that old women live alone without fear and leave the doors of your houses unlocked during the day.
People smile from their entrances, They greet each other from their porches, they lend themselves things together, salt, an egg, a cup of sugar, because that’s what they do the neighbors. On a street in Lancaster, in a house modest and comfortable, lived a woman called Dorotti Bus. Dorothy was 71 years. He had dedicated most of his life to the teaching of psychology in the Colid center in Dallas, entering the year after year in the classrooms, putting themselves to the facing and helping young people to understand how the mind works
human. He had dedicated decades to that labor. He had retired with dignity, with his memories and with a serene satisfaction that is only achieved after a life lived honestly. In the entrance of his [music] house there was a White Mercedes-Benz van. On his left hand he wore a ring of diamond weddings, the kind that They contain a whole life, of those that you put once and you never think take it off She had her purse, her credit cards, the simple, everyday possessions of a woman who had worked hard and asked very little of the world. Dorothy Bush
I was no longer pursuing anything. He had reached his destiny, he simply lived. I had no idea that the woman next door side was about to snatch the life. That woman was Kimberly the Gaile McCarthy. Kimberly was 36 years old at the time. summer of 1997. She was not a stranger to Dorotti. No It was a mysterious figure that had appeared without prior notice.
It was the neighbor, someone whom Dorotti I recognized who I had spoken to, someone whose face was so familiar like the street itself. From the outside, Kimberly McCarty was just a woman who lived nearby. had a son. I had worked in different moments of his life like occupational therapist in nursing homes elderly, accompanying residents older, helping them move, helping them recover, being the constant and attentive presence of which fragile people depend.
Also had worked as a caregiver domicile. He knew how to take care of people, he knew how earn their trust. But within the walls of life Kimberly McCarty, something had come up terribly wrong. Her marriage to Aaron Michaels, a man [music] deeply linked to controversial organizations headline-grabbing policies nationals, was deteriorating.
His financial situation was a disaster and what consumed her inside, what took away any possibility of become a better version of yourself itself, it was a crack addiction that had become so powerful that now He made all the decisions for her. Crack not only takes your money, it remove the mind Eliminate that part of you who stops to think before acting.
Silence the voice that says this is wrong, that this will hurt someone, that It is a line of no return. Replace everything that with a unique, imperious and relentless. Those who have fought for get out of a severe crack addiction described as a hunger that never sleep. An order that cancels everything.
The love, fear, shame, consciousness, people’s faces who trusted you. By July 1997, Kimberly McCarty no longer had anything to do sell or money to spend. According to the written confession that He later handed over to the police, night there were men in her house, drug traffickers who demanded payment and were not willing to wait.
When he told them that he had nothing, They asked if I knew anyone nearby. that might have something of value, someone whose house they could open, someone who could approach without lifting suspicions. Kimberly thought about it and thought about Dorotibus, the retired teacher next door, the woman with the Mercedes in the driveway, the woman with ring on finger, woman who opened the door without fear because not had no reason in the world to fear the face that was on the other side. Then Kimberly McCarty picked up.
the phone. She called Dorotibus, He asked if he could come, borrow a cup of sugar. And Dorotibus said that yes. Right now, as you read this, that phrase probably seems the saddest of the world. And rightly so, because among all the years, all the details, all the courts and all owners who They followed that moment, an old woman saying yes to a neighbor, it was moment when everything ended for Dorotibus.
He said yes in the most humane way, simple and supportive, imaginable. He said yes, like the good ones do. people who have dedicated their lives to being kind and have never been punished for I had no idea that this time It would be different. Don’t go anywhere, because What happened when that door opened? It is a chapter of this story that does not you can stop reading once you start.
Doroth Bus opened the door of her house, [music] let his neighbor in. Whatever the words they exchanged in those first seconds, whatever the small courtesies or the simple Greetings who crossed the threshold of that home, now they have vanished. There is no trace of them. They belonged to a moment that ended almost before start, because Kimberly McCarty doesn’t He had come to borrow sugar.
She had come for everything she had Dorotibus. [snort] What happened inside that house in Lancaster the night of July 21 1997 is part of the judicial file official of the state of Texas. It is documented in the transcripts of trials, in police reports and in the forensic evidence presented in two different criminal trials.
It’s hard to swallow, but Dorothy Bus deserves to be recognized in its entirety because the woman who opened the door was night he was a real human being and what he they did must be told honestly so that your story has some relevance. Kimberly McCarty brought with her a butcher knife to that house.
It was a 25 cm knife. [music] It wasn’t one of those that you forget to pack, nor of those that end up in your hands for accident. He carried it with him. He had brought it on purpose. She did it used inside Doroty Bus’s house. Dorotibus was stabbed five times, five times, in his own dining room, in the house he had built and where he lived peacefully and considered safe.
five times by a woman whose face he knew, a woman he had left enter through the door of his house, but the attack was not limited to the knife. Kimberly Mcarty took a heavy metal candle holder, one piece decorative part of the house, and used it to hitting Dorothy repeatedly. The investigators and lawyers who They examined the evidence later They described the scene in the dining room as one of the most disturbing that they had witnessed.
Doroti Bus collapsed on the floor of her dining room. She was dying. and So, and this is the hardest part. of the story, Kimberly McCarty looked at the diamond wedding ring on hand left of Doroty Bus. The ring that had been on that finger for decades. The ring that was the physical symbol of a shared life, a promise fulfilled, a love that had lasted enough to be part of the person who carried it.
Kimberly McCarty I wanted that ring. He forced Dorotibus to rest your hand against a surface hard and used the knife, the same knife, to cut off the ring finger left and thus be able to remove the ring. He took the ring, he took the purse Dorotti, took the credit cards from Dorotti, took the keys to the White Mercedes-Benz parked in the entrance.
He left the house, leaving behind the only woman in the room that any once he had been kind to her and He left in his car. He left Dorotibus dying alone on the floor of her dining room and left in Doroty’s car Bus. The next morning, Kimberly McCarty got up and continued with his daily routine.
He drove the Mercedes white Dorotti Bus to a place where he exchanged it for drugs. He went to a pawn shop and sold the Dorotti diamond wedding ring Bush, the ring that had just cost him a woman her finger and her life for $200. $200. Then he went to a liquor store and used the Doroty Boot credit cards for shop.
He used those cards credit four times in a single day, spending without qualms, moving around Dallas like the night before been perfectly normal. Dorothy Bush lay on the floor of the dining room of your house. It was found on the 22nd July 1997. The next day, the authorities They arrived at the house and started a research that advanced rapidly and certainty in one direction.
the car Dorotti’s had disappeared, his ring was missing. Your credit cards had been used several times in places specific, each transaction recorded with date and time. Her bag was missing and his neighbor’s house was only 15 steps. There was no need to make a big detective to follow the trail. All that was needed was patience and that led directly to Kimberly McCarty.
At Kimberly McCarty’s house, the police recovered a large knife butcher [music] Someone had washed it. someone had carefully rinsed trying to eliminate any trace of its use. But forensic science is not Be fooled by soap and water. When the researchers examined the knife in laboratory conditions, They found something inside the tiny slits where the blade joined the mango, something so small that it was invisible to the naked eye, but completely unmistakable for the science. Blood. The blood of Dorotibus.
The DNA matched. The knife that was found in the kitchen by Kimberly McCarty was the same as had been inside the body of Dorotibus. When Kimberly McCarty was questioned, delivered a written confession to the police. In it he admitted having been in the house of Dorotti Bush, having led the car, having sold the ring and having used credit cards.
Without However, he stated that two drug traffickers, to whom he referred only like Kilo and JC, the accompanied them to the house and perpetrated the attack while she was waiting outside in the car. It was a story that tried very carefully put the knife in someone else’s hands, but in the trial the prosecution was able to show the jury something simple and undeniable.
There was not a single physical proof, nor a fingerprint, not a single sample of DNA, not a single footprint, not a only witness, not a single record telephone that would link to any other person with house interior Doroty Bus that night. Nothing. The only DNA was Kimberly Mcarty’s. The only knife was Kimberly’s McCarthy.
The only trace between belongings of Dorotti Bus during the next 24 hours belonged to Kimberly McCarty. Kilo and JC did not exist. On November 24, 1998, a jury of Dallas County convicted Kimberly the Gaile McCartti murder capital. The judge sentenced her to death by lethal injection. he was 37 years old.
But there is something in this story that most people he only knows the headlines he doesn’t know. The story of Kimberly McCarty and Dorotti Bus is not the whole story, nor It’s not even the beginning. Long before Dorothy Bus opened the door of his house, on July 21, 1997, There were two other women, two others homes, two other doors. And what happened behind those doors is what that transforms this case [music] from a terrible tragedy to something much more dark and disturbing.
Keep reading this story. The third part will show you what was before Dorotti Bus and what it means no one stopped him in time. There is a word that is used by investigators when a pattern of damage bass appears more than once, following the same method, with the same type of victim and leaving the same mark on every scene.
The word is serial. It is a word that It changes everything in one case. It means that the first time was not a moment of desperate and terrible judgment. It means that there was a second time and a third. It means that whoever caused the damage knew what he did. I had done it before, I had chosen, had perfected it.
In the case of Kimberly Mcarty, the employer dates back to 9 years before Dorotibus. Let’s go back to December 1988. Kimberly McCarty was 27 years old. The addiction that would eventually lead her to Dorotti Bush’s door was already present, was already imperious, and dragged towards decisions irreversible. The first woman was called Mg J Hardin.
Mg J H Jardin was 81 years old. Kimberly McCarty was no stranger to her. She was a lifelong friend of the Kimberly’s mother, [music] a woman that had been integrated into the family. He had helped organize the wedding of Kimberly, I had caught her at her house and had allowed him to store furniture there. It was, in every sense of the word a genuinely kind person Kimberly McCarty and had reason to enough to believe that kindness was safe.
In December 1988, Magie Jardín was found in her house. She had been stabbed. They later beat her repeatedly with a meat tenderizer of heavy metal. They stole her purse and credit cards. She doesn’t survived. Weeks later they found a second woman. His name was Getierie Lucas. He was 85 years old. It was a relative distant from Kimberly’s family McCarty, a woman whose name Kimberly I knew, whose face I had seen, that was part of his circle of friendships.
Het Lucas had been attacked in her own house. They stabbed her. Then they hit her, this time with a claw hammer on both sides. You They stole the purse and the cards credit. She didn’t survive either. Now keep these three cases in mind when same time. MG H Jardin, 81 years old, known [music] by Kimberly, attacked in her house, stabbed, then hit with a metal object heavy, stolen.
Je Lucas, 85 years old, known for Kimberly, attacked in her home, stabbed, then hit with a metal object heavy, stolen. Dorotibus, 71-year-old neighbor of Kimberly, attacked in his house, stabbed with a knife, then struck with a heavy candelabra metal, stolen. The victims were of the same type, [music] older women who trusted at Kimberly McCarty and they had some personal connection with her.
The method was the same, first a knife, then a heavy metal object. The reason was himself, stealing to finance his addiction to crack. The result was the same, the death. The signature was identical throughout 9 years and between three women. The tests of DNA in blood collected during Dorothy murder investigation Buff linked Kimberly McCarty to the deaths of Magie Garden and Jetie Lucas that occurred in December 1988.
These DNA tests were presented to the jury during the sentencing phase her trial, not to condemn her for those two deaths, since she was never charged formally of them, but to show the jury the full picture of who They were sentencing. The whole picture was devastating. three old women, three families that would never be again the same, three crime scenes with the same traces, the same method, the Same terrible logic.
And the legal system, for reasons that had to do with the way in which evidence is collected and the cases, he had only taken Kimberly Mcarty to court in the latest case. Think about what this means for the families of Mac Garden and Jetie Lucas. There was never a trial for them. A verdict was never pronounced out loud.
high. There was never a day in court where someone would stand up, say their words names and tell 12 people about the sworn what was done to them and who did it did. They exist in this story as evidence introduced to help explain another person’s fate. Footnotes in a case that It was officially about someone else.
That is one of the most agonies silent within a story already of distressing in itself. After the conviction and death sentence of Kimberly McCarty in 1998, his legal team began the long process of appeals that is common in the capital punishment cases in the United States. And 3 years later, in December 2001, something happened for which no one outside the legal [music] field was completely prepared.
The Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas overturned Kimberly’s conviction McCarty. Not because he was innocent, no because the DNA was wrong, no because the knife would have been bad identified or the house search of counterfeit pawn, but because of how [music] was obtained confession. When the police questioned Kimberly McCarty in 1997, She had requested a lawyer.
According to the Constitution of the United States, at the moment when a person requests legal representation, police interrogation must cease immediate. It didn’t stop. continued to be interrogated and gave a statement that the trial was then used against him. The court ruled that it was a constitutional violation. The declaration had to be excluded and without her conviction based in part on said statement could not be maintained.
Kimberly McCarty was entitled to a completely new trial. The Prosecutor’s Office of Dallas County prepared one. This They once based their case almost exclusively in physical evidence, DNA found in the handle of the knife, the pawnshop registration, credit card records, Mercedes, permission [music] drive of Dorotti Bus found in possession of Kimberly Mcarty and the total lack of evidence to support the story of Kilo and JC.
In 2002, a second Dallas County jury knew the case. The verdict was same culprit. Capital murder. Death. Kimberly McCarty was sentenced to death for second time and then the wait. The fourth part is about that wait, about 15 years in a prison cell death row, about the battle legal that turned this case into a national issue, about the debate on race and justice that accompanied the case of Kimberly McCarty to the doors of the Execution Chamber.
And about the question, the one that has never been asked fully answered if it is possible deliver justice fully in a system that was not always conceived to do it. There are places in the United States where the Time passes differently. Death row is one of them. The Mountain View unit in Gatesbille, Texas, is where women are imprisoned sentenced to death in Texas.
It is a world of extreme restrictions, small cells, controlled movement, limited contact with the outside. There the days are not defined by [music] the possibilities, but because of the wait. Waiting for the trial dates, waiting for failures, waiting for them to be heard and resolved the appeals, waiting above all for the question plans about every hour of every day, the question when, if how it will end everything.
Kimberly McCarty spent 15 years at that world. Since November 1998, when the judge handed down his sentence, until June 2013, when it finally executed, 15 years passed. had 37 years old when he entered the corridor of death. He would have been 52 years old when he abandoned him. definitely. During those 15 years, his legal team, ultimately led by Mauri Levin, professor of law at the University of Texas, explored all the legal avenues available in all levels of the legal system American, state courts, federal courts and the Supreme Court of the United States.
Some of these arguments were procedure, other constitutional, but the argument that attracted the most public attention and that involved national rights organizations civilians in the case was about something much deeper than a simple legal procedure. It was a racial issue. Kimberly McCarty was a black woman.
Dorothy Bus was a white woman Professor Levin argued, with statistical evidence attached to your documents that in both trials of [music] Kimberly McCarty, the prosecution had exercised his right to challenge jurors without explanation, excluding systematically and deliberately to black jurors. Of the 64 possible juries considered during their [music] second trial in 2002, only four not They were white.
The prosecution used what is known as peremptory [music] challenges, the legal mechanism that allows each party to challenge a limited number of juries without the need to justify their decision to eliminate three of those four non-white jurors. [music] The final jury that decided destiny of Kimberly McCarty and sentenced her to death was [music] composed of 11 white members and one black member.
The practice of excluding jurors for racial reasons was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States in a 1986 ruling known as Bxson against Kentucky. Without However, proving that this has occurred in a specific case [music] is extraordinarily difficult. The prosecution does not need to justify its decision by excluding a jury.
The pattern may be evident in the statistics and still result legally impossible to prove according to the judicial requirements. Professor Levin argued that the pattern existed. Amnesty International published reports formalities that described the concerns about racial bias in the case of Kimberly McCarty. Civil rights organizations filed allegations for a period in early 2013.
As the date of his execution, the case of Kimberly McCarty became a central point of national debate on whether the death penalty death in the United States can ever be administered without the shadow of racial inequality overshadow In January 2013, the state of Texas scheduled Kimberly’s execution McCarty for January 29, 2013.
She would have been the first woman executed in the United States in almost 3 years. The attention was intense. The documents legals came and [music] came. activists gathered in front of the court and in front of the prison in Unsvile. And then, just a few hours before the scheduled time with Kimberly McCarty already transferred to the cell adjacent to the Execution Chamber, a Dallas judge stopped the execution.
The clock stopped. It was not a pardon. It was not a declaration of innocence. It was a legal pause, a deadline granted to the courts to listen and will consider the arguments again remaining. The execution was first rescheduled for on April 3, 2013. Then, when the presentation of new documents required additional review, rescheduled for June 26 [music] 2013.
Imagine how those feel months from inside a cell. You will put a date on your life. You see it getting closer day by day. You feel that approaches in a way that only can [music] understand who knows the date of his own death. And then the date changes, it is not deleted, it is changed. A new date replaces it and begins know how that other one approaches.
The wait It doesn’t get easier the second time or the third. On each occasion the Courts reviewed the arguments. On each occasion rulings were issued. The Supreme Court of the United States he refused to hear the case. They sold out the remaining appeals. The suspensions were lifted one by one one until there were none left.
On the 26th June 2013 was the final date. The day that had been arriving for 15 years Now it was 5 months away, then 3 months, then 4 weeks, then a week. Then one day and on the night of the 26th June 2013, Kimberly McCarty was moved from Mountain Viw unit to the Wols unit in Unsville, the installation of red brick in the center of Unzville, where Texas has carried out their executions since 1982.
The final chapter of this story was about to be written and I would write in a room with a crystal that separated the living from the condemned in front of a family that I had been waiting for 16 years to sit down in it. The fifth part is the last of this story. It is the part that will dial because the number Kimberly McCarty brought to the Execution Chamber June 26, 2013 is a number that It doesn’t belong to anyone else in history.
of the United States. June 26, 2013 was a warm Wednesday afternoon in Unsvile, Texas. The Unsvile city sits in an area mountainous covered with pine trees at about 110 km north of Houston. It’s a small town, apparently calm and peaceful, but with a importance that most of the American cities don’t have them.
there is the headquarters of the Department of Texas Criminal Justice. The unit Walls, the prison where Texas executes its condemned, is located in the middle center, surrounded by streets and buildings common, close enough to so that passersby can see their brick walls from wax. Inside the wall control unit, On the night of June 26, 2013, the state of Texas was preparing to do something I had already done 499 times, but this time it was different.
This time the number was 500. 500 executions carried out by the state of Texas since the resumption of capital punishment in the United States in 1976. 500 people who visited it hallway were placed in the same stretcher, in the same chamber. No other state of the United States has come closer never to that figure.
Texas supports this absolute record without parallel in the entire history of the death penalty in the United States United. And the person he would become in number 500 it was a 52-year-old woman years called Kimberly, the Gaile Mcartti. He was 36 years old when Dorotti Bus opened the door. Now he was 52 after having spent 15 years on death row, years in that her face had changed, her hair had turned gray and the world outside had run its course, as usual happen while people remain motionless in their cells.
had survived a conviction, a verdict annulled, to a second sentence, to an execution date suspended and 15 years of litigation in all levels of the judicial system United States. It had been the subject of reports in the national press, rights reports civil, lawsuits before the Supreme Court and candlelight vigils at the doors of the prison. Now she was here.
In the Walls unit execution chamber There is a room divided by glass. On one side of the glass the condemned. On the other side the witnesses sit in rows, some in representation of the State, others in representation of the convicted person and others in representation of the victim. In the night of June 26, 2013, sitting in the witness room on behalf of Dorotibus, there were three people: daughter of Dorotibus, granddaughter of Dorotibus, godson of Dorotibus.
Three people who had carried the injury on July 21, 1997 during 16 years old. Three people who had waited for two full trials, 15 years of appeals and two dates of execution, who had sat on courtrooms, read articles journalistic, received calls telephone calls from lawyers and seen as the calendar changed again and again and that Now, they had finally reached the living room.
where everything would end. 16 years is a long time to wait something. It’s enough time to see a child become adult. Time enough to forget how you were before for the pain to come. Time enough to start wondering if Will the end ever come or if the legal system will find one more door to open, one more argument than listen, one more reason to stay in the waiting room of justice a little more.
Dorothy Bus’s family had hoped all that time and now they were here. You Kimberly Mcarty was asked if she had some final words. He thanked his lawyers for the years of work they dedicated to your case. He thanked those who wrote to him and supported during their time in death row. He talked about his family and expressed his love for them.
He talked about his faith. She didn’t speak directly with Dorotti’s family Bus. He did not mention the name of the woman who had called by phone on the 21st of July 1997 to ask him for a cup of sugar before entering your house and take your life The process of lethal injection was administered at 6 the afternoon and 17.
At 6:37, 20 minutes later, a doctor declared Kimberly dead Gaile McCarthy. The 500th execution in Texas. Dorotibus’ daughter sat on the other side of the glass and witnessed what happened. There is no record of what he said after. No declaration has been recorded yours in the witness room during those last minutes.
There is only the fact that that was there, that stood firm for 16 years and traveled to Uns Ville one June afternoon to see with your own eyes the final chapter of the story that had begun the night his mother opened the door of her house. After the execution, Professor Mauri Levin appeared before the press and described the case as a record of embarrassing mistakes.
He spoke about the racial composition of the juries and on the quality of the legal representation in the first stages of the process. He argued that, Regardless of its result, the process was marked by failures that history cannot ignore. These arguments do not distort the facts of the case.
The knife with the DNA of Dorotti Bus in the handle was real. The pawnshop registration with Kimberly McCarty’s name was real. The credit card transactions They were real. The amputated finger was real. The Three Old Women, Maggie Garden, Jetie Lucas and Dorotti Bus were real. Your Families were real. His pain was real. It is real and will remain so long after that they have been presented, responded and forgotten all the legal arguments.
But the question the professor asked Levin, whether a justice system that bears the accumulated weight of the racial inequality can ever issue a completely free verdict of that shadow, it is also real. It doesn’t go away with the verdict, does not fade with execution, stays with the facts of the case, uncomfortable unresolved, demanding a response that the legal system even Now he hasn’t found a way to give.
What is not complicated, what is not requires legal arguments, analysis statistics or precedents of the Court Supreme is this. Dorotti Bus was a real woman He was born on May 14, 1926. He dedicated his life to learning, teaching and intellectual development of the others. He retired with dignity. lived calmly and honestly in a house in Lancaster, Texas, and it was one of those neighbors who always said yes when someone I was calling to order something small.
she He deserved to grow old in peace in that house. deserved to die at the time, surrounded by the people who loved her in bed the one who had slept for years with her wedding ring still on finger. she He deserved all that. Instead, what obtained was a neighbor who used her trust as a key, a cup of sugar as cover and a butcher knife as the last word.
And then he had 16 years of courts, appeals, cycles of news and legal procedures, while your daughter was waiting and his granddaughter was waiting, and the empty place where Dorotti used to be got a little bigger with each year what was happening Kimberly Gaile McCarty was born on May 11, 1961. She was executed on June 26, 2013 age 52 in Unville, Texas.
He was the 500th person executed by the state of Texas since 1976. She was the first woman executed in United States in almost 3 years. Dorothy Bus was 71 years old when he died on the 21st. July 1997 in Lancaster, Texas. He opened the door to someone who he trusted and could never again open it.
Some stories end with justice, others end with questions. This story ends with both, sitting next to each other, refusing to separate and refusing to let you go Dorotibus deserves to be remembered, not as a case number, not like the victim in the headline of another, but as a woman who lived fully, which he taught with dedication, who loved warmly and who trusted those who surrounded her with a frankness that cost him everything.
Remember his name, Dorotiby Bus. Say it once before moving on. she was here and that is the story of Kimberly Mcarty, the neighbor The number 500, the woman who used a cup of sugar as gateway to someone’s life and He left it taking everything he had with him. mattered, leaving behind everything that it mattered even more. If this story moved you, yes Did you feel something reading it or listening to it, then this is the right channel for you.
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