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| 1953 Arizona Governor's Address after raid on Short Creek - |
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PerryPeabody
Posted:
Sun Jun 08, 2008 4:49 pm |
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1953 Arizona Governor's Address after raid on Short Creek
[If this has been put up elsewhere, I apologize.]
Police raid Arizona polygamist enclave
An historical account of a radio address given by Arizona Governor Howard Pyle shortly after the Short Creek raid in 1953.
(Source: http://savethechildbrides.com).
Arizona police send residents of Short Creek packing. (Utah Historical Society)
Before dawn today the State of Arizona began and now has substantially concluded a momentous police action against insurrection within her own borders.
Arizona has mobilized and used its total police power to protect the lives and future of 263 children. They are the product and the victims of the foulest conspiracy you could possibly imagine.
More than 120 peace officers moved into Short Creek, in Mohave County, at 4 o'clock this morning. They have arrested almost the entire population of a community dedicated to the production of white slaves who are without hope of escaping this degrading slavery from the moment of their birth.
Highly competent investigators have been unable to find a single instance in the last decade of a girl child reaching the age of 15 without having been forced into a shameful mockery of marriage.
THE STATE OF ARIZONA IS FULFILLING TODAY ONE OF EVERY STATE'S DEEPEST OBLIGATIONS. . .TO PROTECT AND DEFEND THE HELPLESS.
The State is moving at once to seek through the courts the custody of these 263 children, all under the age of 18. They are the innocent chattels of a lawless commercial undertaking of wicked design and ruthlessly exercised power. This in turn is the co-operative enterprise of five or six coldly calculating men who direct all of the operations and reap all of the profits, and are the evil heart of the insurrection itself.
It is no surprise that some of these vicious conspirators are former convicts.
Warrants were carried into Short Creek this morning for 35 men, many of them related, who include not only a hard core of plotters but a wider circle of fawning beneficiaries of this conspiracy that the State of Arizona is determined to end right now and completely.
As the highest authority in Arizona, on whom is laid the Constitutional injunction to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed," I have taken the ultimate responsibility for setting into motion the actions that will end this insurrection.
It should be clearly understood at the same time that so complicated an operation has required and has received the co-operation of many elements of our government . . . and has been undertaken only as a last desperate resort.
In many situations of the last few years I have reminded the people of Arizona thar law enforcement is primarily a country problem--UNTIL SUCH TIME AS COUNTIES THEMSELVES DECLARE OR BY THEIR ACTIONS PROVE THAT THEY ARE ABLE NO LONGER TO FULFILL THEIR FUNCTIONS.
MOHAVE COUNTY APPEALED FOR STATE INTERVENTION TO END THIS INSURRECTION. The county's plea came to your governor from the Honorable J.W. Faulkner, Mohave County's highest legal authority as judge of the superior court there, in March of 1951, when I had been on duty only two months.
Judge Faulkner recited the almost incredible details of this conspiracy . . . details almost revoltingly incomprehensible at this mid-point of the 20th century. The sheer magnitude of the situation demanded immediate action, but even more urgently required proof beyond any possible doubt.
Hence it is that 26 months have passed since Judge Faulkner's first letter came to me. The investigation has been most thorough. Two attorneys general have participated. Appalled successive Legislatures have approved funds for every phase of the investigation . . . and it has been from the very beginning a disturbing undertaking.
It has been, frankly, the one and only real sorrow of my administration, intruding as it has on a hundred other problems of state, and occupying the time and energy of scores of men and women. There had to be absolute certainty that in the end the innocent should be as securely protected as the guilty were severely punished.
Before a single complaint was drawn, or a single warrant prepared, or the first preliminary order for today's action issued, we had to be certain beyond the last shadow of doubt.
All doubt is erased when it is realized that in the evidence the State has accumulated there are multiple instances of statutory rape, adultery, bigamy, open and notorious cohabitation, contributing to the delinquency of minors, marrying the spouse of another, and an all-embracing conspiracy to commit all of these crimes, along with various instances of income tax evasion, failure to comply with Arizona's corporation laws, misappropriation of school funds, improper use of school facilities and falsification of public records.
The leaders of this mass violation of so many of our laws have boasted directly to Mohave County officers that their operations have grown so great that the State of Arizona was powerless to interfere.
They have been shielded, as you know, by the geographic circumstances of Arizona's northernmost territory . . . the region beyond the Grand Canyon that is best known as "The Strip."
This is a land of high plateaus, dense forests, great breaks and gorges, rolling arid lands, and intense color . . . a land squeezed between the even higher plateaus of Utah and the Grand Canyon of Arizona.
The community of Short Creek is 400 miles by the shortest road from the Mohave County seat of Kingman. Short Creek is unique among Arizona communities in that some of its dwellings actually are in another state.
ALL OF THE RESIDENTS OF SHORT CREEK WHO LIVE IN UTAH HAVE BEEN CHARGED WITH THE CRIMES THEY HAVE COMMITTED IN ARIZONA. We have neither enlisted nor encouraged the State of Utah to take action simultaneously with or parallel to our own, for it is a mass insurrection against the State of Arizona that we seek to suppress.
To the best of our knowledge and information, there are only five residents of Short Creek who are in NO way involved in this situation. They are Mr. and Mrs. Jonreed Lauritzen, Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Nyborg, and Don Covington. They are old residents of a colorful part of Arizona who have found themselves surrounded by this conspiracy, and have given invaluable help in the elimination we have now undertaken.
Massive cliffs rearing north of Short Creek's little central street provide a natural rock barrier to the north. To the east and west are the sweeping expanses of dry and almost barren plateaus before the forests begin. To the south there is the Grand Canyon.
It is in this most isolated of all Arizona communities that the foulest of conspiracies has flourished and expanded in a terrifying geometric progression. HERE HAS BEEN A COMMUNITY ENTIRELY DEDICATED TO THE WARPED PHILOSOPHY THAT A SMALL HANDFUL OF GREEDY AND LICENTIOUS MEN AND SHOULD HAVE THE RIGHT AND THE POWER TO CONTROL THE DESTINY OF EVERY HUMAN SOUL IN THE COMMUNITY.
HERE IS A COMMUNITY--MANY OF THE WOMEN, SADLY, RIGHT ALONG WITH THE MEN--UNALTERABLY DEDICATED TO THE WICKED THEORY THAT EVERY MATURING GIRL CHILD SHOULD BE FORCED INTO THE BONDAGE OF MULTIPLE WIFEHOOD WITH MEN OF ALL AGES FOR THE SOLE PURPOSE OF PRODUCING MORE CHILDREN TO BE REARED TO BECOME MORE CHATTELS OF THIS TOTALLY LAWLESS ENTERPRISE.
Some of the boys have escaped this dreadful and dreary life. But the girls . . . no.
The very institutions such as the schools, upon which we all depend for the cultivation of the ideals that have made the nation great and Arizona great, have been perverted to the inculcation in our young of a devotion to this RANK AND FETID DISTORTION OF ALL OF OUR BASIC RIGHTS AND IDEALS.
The very operation of this insurrectional conspiracy, with its complete disregard of all decency and of all law, have served to expand the population of Short Creek until it is probably the second largest community in Mohave County.
Sixteen years ago it was nothing. You may recall at that time two individuals, who were almost all of the male population of Short Creek, were sent to the Arizona State Prison to serve terms for flagrant violations of the state's moral laws.
They had half a dozen wives.
But their prison terms ended . . . they returned to Short Creek . . . and now the two have expanded to the 35 men named in warrants today . . . and their wives have increased from half a dozen to 85.
The criminally deadly part is that their children under legal age now number the 263 we mentioned earlier.
It is easy to see from this rapid expansion that in another 10 years the population of Short Creek would be in the thousands, and an army would not be sufficient to end the greatest insurrection and defiance of all that is right.
Of the 120 persons named in warrants as being involved in this ever growing conspiracy, 83 have their principal homes in Arizona. The rest base their operations in Utah, although a number of these have additional homes in Arizona.
Not all of the men for whom warrants have been issued have been arrested, but it is fully anticipated that they will be. Those who have crossed or subsequently cross the state line into Arizona during the course of the police operations will be jailed on the Arizona warrants. THOSE WHO ELECT TO REMAIN IN UTAH WILL BE SOUGHT ON WARRANTS OF EXTRADITION.
This may take days or weeks, but it WILL be done. It is regrettable that this action had to be undertaken on a Sunday, but there were a number of vital considerations. There has been a community entertainment the last day or two in Short Creek that has attracted the maximum number of those named in warrants. Today the maximum number of police officers have been free from other duties. And the situation they have moved against has been as godless as anything we have ever known.
It should be emphasized here that we have gone to almost unbelievable lengths to insure that the rights of no one are violated or even jeopardized in this action.
Moving into Short Creek right behind the officers with their warrants have been the courts. Superior Judge J. Smith Gibbons of Apache County has been acting as committing magistrate and has observed every legal propriety in holding the principal defendants to answer for trial in superior court as he also ordered these principal defendants to jail in Kingman, the county seat.
The defendants are being transported right now to Kingman to await release on bail for those who are able to provide it or who have it provided for them. These are the men and some of the more ardently involved women.
In the case of the unwilling wives and the children, the action has been parallel but entirely different. Juvenile judges have gone along with the other superior court judges.
Judge Lorna Lockwood of Maricopa County, whose understanding in juvenile matters is widely recognized, and Judge Faulkner himself, have started and for some time will continue a series of juvenile court actions through which the State of Arizona expects to be able to provide protection for the 263 children.
This protection is very inclusive. It is calculated, under Arizona's laws, to give these children every possible garment of secrecy so that in years to come, the action in which they are now involved cannot appear anywhere as a matter of public record.
Right along with the courts have gone trained social workers. A full staff from the state department of public welfare has gone along with the officers and the courts to take immediate custody of those children the courts decide should be brought under the protection of the State of Arizona.
There hasn't been and there won't be any hardship in all of this. Facilities, equipment, and supplies have been sent into the area to be prepared to feed every defendant and every innocent victim, and every officer and participating state official, as long as may be necessary.
There is a medical staff to guard against any health contingency, and facilities are provided to care for everyone. There has been and there will be NO invasion of homes or quarters, for our people have with them a complete miniature tent city which by now has been erected in unused community space, and will house the state's personnel for as long as such housing is necessary.
Representing the state department of law in the filing of complaints, the issuance of warrants, and the general direction of all legal phases of this operation, is the attorney general himself, Ross Jones.
He has with him two of his assistants, Paul LaPrade and Kent Blake. LaPrade and Blake are the men who have conducted the preparation of all the cases designed to shatter for all time this insurrection and the conspiracy that supports it.
To climax their work and beginning the conclusive phase of this operation, I signed an official proclamation on July first, declaring a state of insurrection to exist in Mohave County and in the community of Short Creek.
Secretary of State Wesley Bolin and State Auditor Jewell Jordan have co-operated fully in handling the transfer of funds, especially appropriated to the Governor's office for this purpose, to the office of the attorney general . . . and in the proper and orderly expenditures of sums from that appropriation.
As your governor, I have been at my desk since early this morning, ready to issue any order or authorization to meet changing plans or unforeseen circumstances. I have been in complete and almost instantaneous contact with the operation from its beginning, through my administrative assistant who is at the scene.
To the eternal credit of the press and radio of Arizona, none of this complex operation has been publicized in advance in any way, ALTHOUGH REPRESENTATIVE OF ALL MEDIA HAVE BEEN FULLY APPRISED OF EVERY DEVELOPMENT DURING THE ENTIRE 26 MONTHS OF PREPARATION. The whole purpose of this operation would have been destroyed had any part of it been known generally in advance.
Now this most necessary cloak of secrecy is removed.
From here on out and no doubt for some time to come you will be hearing directly from press and radio correspondents whose names you know well and in whom you have implicit faith.
They have gone right along with the officers and the courts, to observe and report everything.
While we leave the rest of the details of this fantastic insurrection and its ending in their hands, it must be reiterated that THE STATE OF ARIZONA IS UNALTERABLY PLEDGED AND DETERMINED TO STOP THIS MONSTROUS AND EVIL GROWTH BEFORE IT BECOMES A CANCER OF A SORT THAT IS BEYOND HOPE OF HUMAN REPAIR.
EVEN IF THE LETTER OF THE LAW DIDN'T EXIST AS IT DOES. . .COMMON DECENCY DEMANDS THIS.
THESE CHILDREN HAVE THE RIGHTS OF ALL NATIVE-BORN AMERICANS--THE RIGHTS THAT WERE WRITTEN INTO THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. . . .
THE RIGHT TO LIFE, LIBERTY, AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS. . .AND AS HAS SO OFTEN BEEN EMPHASIZED SINCE, HAPPINESS OF THEIR OWN CHOOSING. . . .
THE STATE OF ARIZONA IS DETERMINED TO INSURE THAT THEY HAVE THOSE RIGHTS FOR THE REMAINDER OF THEIR LIVES.
WE COULD DO NO LESS THAN THIS.
Sunday, July 26, 1953
http://extras.sltrib.com/specials/polygamy/raidaccount.asp
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Joined: 24 Mar 2006
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Tonk
Posted:
Sun Jun 08, 2008 5:48 pm |
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Wow .. I just kee thinking how can this happen. Not a single girl age 15 or over that is not married.
Texas better step up to the plate in a big way
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Joined: 25 Jul 2006
Posts: 723
Location: pray for rain
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PerryPeabody
Posted:
Sun Jun 08, 2008 6:06 pm |
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| Tonk wrote: | Wow .. I just kee thinking how can this happen. Not a single girl age 15 or over that is not married.
Texas better step up to the plate in a big way |
Well, at Short Creek they didn't have the new mandate/rule/word-of-god direct from Joseph Smith as to following state marriage age laws that they have now. (I wonder if these new revelations came down on stone tablets.)
PS-Notice the garb of those women. The society seems to have gone backwards.
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Joined: 24 Mar 2006
Posts: 1083
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tulsad
Posted:
Sun Jun 08, 2008 6:12 pm |
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| PerryPeabody wrote: |
Well, at Short Creek they didn't have the new mandate/rule/word-of-god direct from Joseph Smith as to following state marriage age laws that they have now. (I wonder if these new revelations came down on stone tablets.)
PS-Notice the garb of those women. The society seems to have gone backwards. |
I already posted this awhile ago on the photos thread and made basically the same comment, Perry.
Women and children are rounded up during the 1953 raid in Short Creek, Ariz. The raid became a rallying point for the FLDS.
Edited to add caption.
Last edited by tulsad on Sun Jun 08, 2008 6:14 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Sparkly Tree
Joined: 19 Aug 2006
Posts: 10139
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tulsad
Posted:
Sun Jun 08, 2008 6:13 pm |
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Parallels to Short Creek raid in 1953 are pointed out
By Geoffrey Fattah
Deseret Morning News
In the early morning hours, law enforcement moved into the polygamist community, seizing hundreds of women and children under the premise of child abuse — specifically that young girls were being married to older men.
This isn't Eldorado, Texas, in 2008 but rather Short Creek, Ariz., in 1953. At the time, the raid made national news as the largest roundup of men, women and children in modern American history.
One University of Utah professor, who has written a book on the history of the Short Creek raid, says what is unfolding in Texas is history almost repeating itself. The removal of hundreds of women and children and placing them in foster care, the raid of a polygamist community by dozens of officers and the accusation of child-bride marriages are all eerily similar, said Martha Sonntag Bradley.
If history is to be any kind of teacher, Bradley said, Texas authorities need to know that after the 1953 Short Creek raid, every man, woman and child returned to Short Creek to resume their polygamist lives. The raid quickly became the FLDS Church's rallying point — a tale handed down to the next generation as of a test of faith and of overcoming of outside oppression, which made the community even more closed and opaque to the outside world.
"Remember Short Creek" is a motto heard among polygamists. Even today in the twin communities of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Ariz., monuments serve as a reminder. "July 26, 1953. We must never forget how the lord blessed us in restoring our families taken in the 53 raid — Uncle Roy," one states.
Bradley interviewed more than 100 people in Colorado City about the raid, and in 1993 published the book "Kidnapped From That Land: The Government Raids on the Short Creek Polygamists."
"It's playing out again," Bradley told the Deseret Morning News after reading the articles and viewing the TV images pouring out of Eldorado and the YFZ Ranch. The images of women and children being ushered out of the community is almost the same as images from 1953 in Arizona.
Bradley said Arizona Gov. John Howard Pyle was concerned that men were marrying young females. In order to investigate, Pyle hired a group of private investigators, who infiltrated Short Creek under the guise of a Hollywood film crew. At the time, Hollywood loved the Utah/Arizona border's red-rock terrain as backdrops for westerns. While "scoping out the terrain," the crew filmed young women and their children as evidence of child-bride marriages.
"It was about the children, in particular the young women," Bradley said. "The purpose of that raid, and this one, was to take children out of that context, and the mothers were given the option to go along."
In the early-morning hours of July 26, 1953, more than 100 Arizona state police officers and soldiers with the National Guard entered Short Creek. Bradley said there is evidence that someone from within the Arizona Attorney General's Office had tipped off FLDS leaders about the raid. The some 400 inhabitants of Short Creek were "waiting in the school yard singing 'America' beneath a waving flag as the authorities arrived," a United Press article read.
Some 36 men were arrested. Eighty-six women and 263 children were taken into welfare custody.
What is also interesting, Bradley said, is the lack of violence in both Short Creek and Eldorado. "They anticipated violence, but there was no violence," she said.
Media reports of the 1953 raid quickly spread. More than 100 reporters rushed to the area, reportedly invited by Pyle to observe the raid. Although the raid took place in the same week the Korean War cease-fire was announced, the raid was covered by Time, Newsweek and other news outlets.
Pyle called it "a momentous police action against insurrection," and described the fundamentalists as "the foulest conspiracy you could possibly imagine," saying it amounted to white slavery.
The day after the raid, the Deseret News published an editorial supporting the action. "Law-abiding citizens of Utah and Arizona owe a debt of gratitude to Arizona's Governor Howard Pyle and to his police officers who, Sunday, raided the polygamous settlement at Short Creek and rounded up its leaders for trial. The existence of this community on our border has been a smudge on the reputations of our two great states. We hope Governor Pyle will make good his pledge to eradicate the illegal practices conducted there 'before they become a cancer of a sort that is beyond hope of human repair."'
However, Pyle's actions became a public-relations disaster. Coming on the heels of the totalitarianism of Adolf Hitler and World War II, Americans were sensitive to strong police action. Media publications criticized the raid as "un-American," while others questioned how children can be involved in a government insurrection. "It seemed like an extreme response," Bradley said.
Pyle, a close friend of Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater and a rising star within the Republican party, was said to have been a favorite for the party's presidential nomination. Bradley said the negative publicity over the raid was blamed for Pyle's fall from political grace and he also lost his gubernatorial re-election in 1954.
The Short Creek men were jailed for two months and, although they were released on bail, Bradley said none of them was ever prosecuted. After two years under court custody, every man, woman and child returned to Short Creek, even though the women were given a chance to leave with state help. Bradley said her research showed that child-bride marriages were not the norm back then, as assumed; rather, the average age of new wives was 19.
Yet there are some differences between Arizona 1953 and Texas 2008. Bradley said today there seems to be less of a tolerance for child abuse. The public is also more aware of polygamy cases involving underage marriages. Bradley said the prosecutions of Kingston clan members, Tom Green and FLDS leader Warren Jeffs led up to Eldorado.
Texas authorities are also operating under the shadow of the 1993 siege at Waco, in which 82 members of a Branch-Davidian sect died during a standoff and fire.
The YFZ Ranch is an important place for FLDS members. It is the site where they have built their first temple, which has been entered and searched by police. Bradley called that move "huge" and one that could have heightened tensions.
However, "one thing that it points to is their lack of willingness to resort to violence. One would think that would be the moment," she said.
What happens now in Texas will shape the future of the FLDS Church, Bradley said. If Texas authorities allow the women and children to go back, they will likely return and seal themselves off from the outside world even more.
"The raid in '53 didn't put an end to polygamy," she said.
E-mail: gfattah@desnews.com
deseretnews.com
Originally published Thursday, April 10, 2008
http://www.childbrides.org/nws_texas_des_parallels_to_Short_Creek_raid_pointed_out.html
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Sparkly Tree
Joined: 19 Aug 2006
Posts: 10139
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tulsad
Posted:
Sun Jun 08, 2008 6:26 pm |
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Governor Perry Defends CPS Abuses
From the FLDS website Truth Will Prevail
By Donald Richter
Sunday 8th of June 2008
During his visit to LaBaule, France, where he gave the keynote address at a European business conference on June 5, 2008, Governor Rick Perry made some very disturbing remarks pertaining to the FLDS people in Texas.
Asked at the conference whether he would fire or discipline any state officials because of the way the FLDS case was handled, Perry remarked, “I think that with the knowledge CPS had at the time they acted with the best interest of those children.”
The statement itself is a tacit admission that CPS now has knowledge that their actions were not justified. We claim they knew this all along and purposely distorted the facts.
Governor Perry, however, seems to be among those who still believe the distortions. He also said, “I still think that the state of Texas has an obligation to young women who are forced into marriage and underage sex—to protect them. That’s my bottom line on this.”
His message to the FLDS people bristled with prejudice and bigotry: “[I]f you are going to conduct yourself that way, we are going to prosecute you. If you don’t want to be prosecuted for those activities, then maybe Texas is not the place you need to consider calling home.”
Perry has already judged the FLDS people! Whatever happened to being presumed “innocent until proven guilty”? Does Perry still believe the discredited allegations about the “dozens of underage mothers” or the lurid insinuations regarding the beds in the temple? The Third Court of Appeals clearly ruled that the “evidence adduced at the hearing April 17-18, 2008, was legally and factually insufficient to support the findings required by section 262.201…” The Texas Supreme Court sustained this ruling.
Even though the children now have been reunited with their parents, there remains the very real concern of the permanent psychological and emotional damage they have sustained at the hands of the state authorities. This issue is addressed in the Salt Lake Tribune of June 5, 2008. After noting that many FLDS women still weep when they recall childhood memories of Arizona’s 1953 raid on Short Creek, the article emphasizes the additional trauma the YFZ children today have suffered in being separated not only from their homes and fathers but also from their mothers and siblings. Bonnie Peters, executive director of Family Support Center, a counseling agency in Salt Lake City, is quoted as saying, “Those kids will never be the same from when they left—never.”
How can Governor Perry justify the actions of the past two months and still claim to be concerned with the welfare of these children? He seems to be one of those people whose words really mean, “My mind is already made up. Don’t confuse me with the facts.”
“If responsibility needs to be taken for…saying that we stepped across some legal lines,” Governor Perry said, “I’ll certainly take that responsibility.” Since the Third Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court have already ruled that the state did indeed “[step] across some legal lines,” there is no “if” about it. Of course responsibility needs to be taken. The governor’s words may well come back to haunt him.
http://www.truthwillprevail.org/
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Sparkly Tree
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