In the
Court of Appeals
Second Appellate District of Texas
at Fort Worth
___________________________
No. 02-18-00489-CR
___________________________
RODNEY ALLEN BROWN, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
On Appeal from Criminal District Court No. 2
Tarrant County, Texas
Trial Court No. 1554428R
Before Bassel, Womack, and Wallach, JJ.
Memorandum Opinion by Justice Womack
MEMORANDUM OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
Appellant Rodney Allen Brown appeals his conviction for the continuous sexual
abuse of a child under the age of fourteen and the resulting sentence of incarceration
for life. In one issue, Brown argues that the trial court erred by “admitting into evidence
a summary of the forensic interview of the complaining witness.” Because we conclude
that Brown has not preserved this issue for our review, and alternatively, that Brown
was not harmed by the complained-of evidence, we affirm.
II. BACKGROUND
Brown met the complainant (Complainant) in this case through his stepdaughter
(Darla).1 Complainant and Darla were best friends, and Complainant would often go
over to Darla and Brown’s house. Brown began hugging Complainant in a manner that
Complainant described as “weird.” Brown’s conduct toward the Complainant
progressed, and he began to pick her up without anyone else around, take her to get
food, buy her things, and talk with her on the phone or through an instant messaging
application. According to Complainant, Brown progressed to cuddling her, kissing her,
and ultimately making her have sexual intercourse with him on multiple occasions over
several years at various locations.
1We are using pseudonyms to protect the identity of the minor complainant in
this case. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30(a)(1); Tex. R. App. P. 9.10(a)(3); McClendon v. State,
643 S.W.2d 936, 936 n.1 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1982).
2
Eventually, Complainant told her sister (Sister) about some of these incidents,
and Sister then called and reported the abuse to police. Later, police arrested Brown
for the continuous sexual abuse of Complainant. A jury trial was held.
A. Complainant’s Testimony
Complainant, who was sixteen at the time of trial, testified that when she was in
the second grade, she met Brown through Darla. According to Complainant, she and
Darla lived in the same neighborhood, and she would stay at Darla’s house “[e]very
weekend” when school was in session and “the whole summer and whole spring break.”
Complainant recalled that the first time Brown had ever touched her was when he gave
her a hug right after he had hugged Darla and right before he left for work.
Complainant said that she was in second grade at the time. According to Complainant,
Brown’s hug made her feel “weird” because “[i]t was just like a hug that you would give
to your boyfriend or girlfriend, and it was like a weird vibe.”
By Complainant’s account, Brown hugged her in a similar fashion once more,
but “then the next time I remember him hugging me or cuddling me was when he was
laying down in bed and I was laying on his chest.” Complainant recalled that Brown
did not have his shirt on at the time and that Brown is the one who suggested she get
in the bed with him. Complainant said that Darla’s grandmother came into the room
and saw them and that after the grandmother left, Brown told her to leave the room
because the grandmother was “probably going to be thinking something’s going on
between” Complainant and Brown. Complainant was in the fourth grade at the time.
3
One early morning, when Complainant and Darla were sleeping in the top bunk
of Darla’s bunk bed, Brown came into the room after Brown had just gotten home
from work. Because Complainant and Darla would sleep opposite of each other in the
bed, Complainant’s head was close to the door, and Darla’s head was near the wall,
furthest from the door. Complainant said that Brown shook her awake, assured her it
was him, and “then he just started kissing” her. Allegedly, Brown held Complainant’s
face in his hands as he kissed her, and he put his tongue in her mouth purposely
touching it against her tongue.
Complainant said that on another occasion, she, Darla, Brown, and Darla’s
mother (Carla) were lying in bed together, but Carla got up and left the house to
purchase donuts. After Carla left, according to Complainant, Brown began to kiss both
her and Darla on their lips. When it was apparent that Carla was returning, Brown
stopped.
By Complainant’s account, she and her family moved away from the
neighborhood when she was in the sixth grade, and she and Darla no longer saw each
other. Around that same time, Complainant’s biological father moved away from the
family because of allegations that the father had sexually abused Complainant’s two
oldest sisters. During the ensuing investigation, Complainant made an outcry that her
half brother had made her touch “his private part, and he would touch” hers. Neither
of them had clothes on at the time, and Complainant’s half brother was “in his
twenties.” Complainant said that after the incidents involving her father and half
4
brother occurred, she again started to hang out with Darla, and Brown was always
buying her “stuff” when she came around.
Complainant testified that she could not remember when it happened but that
after the first time Brown inserted his penis into her vagina, she later saw blood in her
underwear. Complainant said that she “just started crying,” and she threw the bloody
underwear into the laundry hamper. She also averred that at one point, when Brown
was living in his own apartment by himself, she would message him,2 and he would
come and get her and take her for food. She would sometimes even go to his apartment
with him when it was just the two of them. According to Complainant, Brown made
her have sex at his apartment at least once.
Complainant recalled another occasion when Brown came to pick her up and
she brought along a friend. But Brown got angry and told her that when he would
come pick her up, he expected it to be just the two of them.
Brown also used to pick Complainant up after volleyball practice. In addition to
buying her food and picking her up after practices, Brown would also buy Complainant
“clothes and stuff.” Complainant said that usually if she would ask Brown for anything,
he would buy it for her, including once buying her a clarinet.
2According to Complainant, she and Brown would communicate through a
messaging application called “Kik,” and a feature of Kik is that it deletes the messages
between the individuals once they log off the application. Complainant said that she
used her mother’s phone when communicating with Brown.
5
Complainant also recalled another incident of abuse when Brown had moved
back in with Darla and Carla, and everyone was preparing to go to bed and Brown
stopped her in the hall:
[Carla] was asleep, everybody was asleep, and me, [Darla] and [Brown] was
in the living room watching TV. And I was falling asleep on the couch,
so he was, like, go to bed. So we was going to bed, but [Darla] made it to
the room before me. Then [Brown] was behind me and he stopped me,
and he was, like, I miss you so much, and he put me against the wall and
just took my clothes off and pulled his pants down and started having sex
with me.
Complainant testified that she was twelve years old at the time.
Complainant also said that when other people were around, Brown would
normally instruct her to be quiet when he was assaulting her. She said he would
sometimes put his hand over her mouth to keep her from making any audible noises.
And Complainant testified to other times when Brown assaulted her when others were
around.
By Complainant’s account, she once messaged Brown to come pick her up to
get some food. Brown picked her up, but instead of going for food, he took her to a
carwash, parked near one of the vacuums, put a sun visor over the window, turned on
the vacuum and placed it in the car with the door barely opened, and had intercourse
with her in the backseat. Complainant said that they did not get food and that Sister
was waiting for her when Brown drove her home and inquired why they had taken so
long.
6
Complainant described for the jury how on one occasion when it was just her,
Darla, Darla’s brother, and Brown in the house, Brown called her and Darla “one by
one” into his bedroom. According to Complainant, she went into Brown’s room and
then she and Brown went into the bathroom, he sat her on the counter, and then “he
just pull[ed] his pants down and [her] pants down and [they] had sex.” Complainant
said that she was eleven years old at the time. After Brown had finished, Complainant
went back into the living room, and Brown called Darla to come to his room.
Complainant said that she could not remember all the times that Brown had made her
have sex with him: “A lot. I can’t keep track of how many times.”
During cross-examination, Complainant described how she was once in the
kitchen talking with Sister, and Sister asked her whether anyone had tried to “touch”
her. Complainant replied that Brown had “touched [her] and has had sex with [her]
before.” Specifically, Complainant told Sister “[a]bout the time when [she and Brown]
had sex at the car wash, when [she] was at his house, and when [she] was in the room
with him when he used to live in Arlington with [Darla] and her grandma.” She also
told Sister about an occasion when Complainant and Darla were in the living room with
Brown, and he was kissing both of them.
Defense counsel questioned Complainant about the forensic interview she
participated in after her outcry against Brown. Defense counsel asked if she had only
told the forensic interviewer about three events between her and Brown, and
Complainant said that she had told the interviewer that Brown had forced her to have
7
sex with him “multiple times.” When asked whether she had told the interviewer about
“three specific times,” Complainant replied, “Yes, three times that I remembered.”
Defense counsel inquired whether the first encounter she discussed with the interviewer
was the time when Brown made her have sex with him in the bathroom, and
Complainant said, “Yes, when he was taking turns with me and [Darla].” Complainant
again described how on that occasion Brown had made her have sex with him as she
sat on the bathroom counter. Defense counsel next pressed Complainant for details
regarding her earlier testimony and the bathroom incident Complainant had just
testified about for the jury. Through his questions, defense counsel alleged that
Complainant had described different and additional details of the bathroom incident in
her testimony than she had in the forensic interview. Complainant replied to this line
of questioning by stating, “[T]here was multiple times when we had sex in the
restroom. . . . I didn’t tell [the interviewer] everything.”
Under continued cross-examination, Complainant again told how Brown had
made her have sex with him in his apartment when they were alone. She explained how
Brown had once stopped her in the hallway after everyone had retreated to bed and
forced her to have sex with him against a wall. She also testified, as she had on direct
examination, how Brown had made her have sex with him in the bedroom when
Brown’s friends and family were in the house, and Brown had ejaculated on the floor.
Defense counsel asked whether she had told the interviewer that specific instance, and
Complainant stated, “I didn’t tell a lot of instances.”
8
Defense counsel also asked what Complainant had told the interviewer about the
time that Brown had kissed her when Darla was also in the bed. After defense counsel
again alleged that what Complainant had testified to about the kissing incident was
different than what she had told the interviewer, Complainant replied, “No, it was the
same story.” Defense counsel further pushed Complainant about what she had told
the interviewer regarding Brown having used his tongue while kissing her and whether
she had told the interviewer that Brown had not used his tongue. Complainant
responded, “I said yes, there was tongue.” Defense counsel also asked whether
Complainant had left out a lot of details when describing the carwash incident to the
interviewer, and Complainant acknowledged, “Yes.”
On redirect examination, Complainant said again that she had not told the
interviewer about every sexual encounter she had with Brown and that she had not told
the interviewer every detail about the incidents she did report during the interview.
Complainant also testified about a time when Brown had messaged her and asked to
pick her up from volleyball practice the next day, and she said, “No,” and how Brown
came to practice the next day anyway and slapped her in the face and told her, “Don’t
ever tell me no.” Supposedly, Brown also used to make her rub his feet, legs, and upper
thighs.
On re-cross-examination, defense counsel asked her if there was any incident
that she could remember that she had not told the jury, and Complainant said, “Yes”
and then went on to describe an event where she had come out of the shower, Darla
9
was then showering, and Brown made her have sex with him. According to
Complainant, she also remembered a time when Brown made her have sex with him,
asked her where she wanted him to ejaculate, she said into a towel, and so he did.
Complainant averred that it was during her initial testimony that she first revealed that
Brown would have sex with her almost every time they were together. Defense counsel
asked if she had ever told the interviewer that she was a virgin prior to the incident
where Brown had called her and Darla into the bedroom one at a time, and
Complainant said that “she never asked me was I a virgin when [Brown first began to
have] sex with me.”
B. The Forensic Interviewer’s Testimony
The State then called the forensic interviewer, Carrie Paschall, to testify. After
asking Paschall about her qualifications and the nature of forensic interviews, the
prosecutor began to ask Paschall about her forensic interview with Complainant.
Specifically, the prosecutor asked Paschall, “And what did she tell you?” Immediately,
the following exchange occurred:
[Defense Counsel]: Objection, hearsay, Your Honor.
[Prosecutor]: Judge, under optional completeness --
THE COURT: Yes.
[Prosecutor]: -- he’s already gone into the forensic interview.
THE COURT: Yeah, that’s true. It’s overruled.
10
Notably, defense counsel neither made another hearsay objection nor requested
a running objection during Paschall’s testimony.3 As the prosecutor’s examination
continued, Paschall recalled how Complainant had initially said that Brown had
“molested her.” When asked whether Complainant had gone into any detail about what
Brown may have done to Complainant, Paschall said, “Yes.” Paschall then went on to
explain how Complainant had told her about a time that Brown came into Darla’s room
early in the morning after returning from work while she and Darla slept in the top
bunk bed, woke Complainant up, and kissed Complainant, including placing his tongue
in her mouth. Paschall said that Complainant also relayed that Brown had kissed Darla
as well but that Complainant did not know “what type of kiss it was.”
Paschall recalled another incident Complainant told her about where Brown had
her lay on his chest but nothing else occurred because someone had come home, and
Brown told her to leave the bedroom. Additionally, Paschall said that Complainant told
her about a time when Carla was at work
and that [Brown] called [Complainant] into the bathroom and had sex with
her in the bathroom and then sent her out of the room and asked for
[Darla]. And then [Darla] was in there a short time, and then
[Complainant] was told to go back in there, where he had sex with her
again.
3 During Paschall’s testimony, defense counsel did object at one point that “she’s
just reading from her notes. I mean, obviously, if she wants to use it to refresh her
memory, we don’t have an issue with that.”
11
Paschall further stated that Complainant had told her that there were “a lot of times”
when Brown had made Complainant have sex with him. And Paschall said
Complainant remembered Brown having made her have sex with him when others were
home. Specifically, Brown called her into the bedroom, made her have sex with him,
and then he ejaculated. Paschall said that Complainant also told about a different time
when Brown asked Complainant where she wanted him to ejaculate after he made her
have sex with him, and she told him into a towel, so he did.
By Paschall’s account, Complainant described the carwash event in details that
were consistent with Complainant’s testimony. Complainant also told Paschall about
the time she refused Brown’s ride, but he came to Complainant’s practice anyway and
slapped her in the face for having told him no. And Complainant told Paschall about
Brown making her have sex with him in his apartment where he was living alone at the
time.
When the prosecutor asked whether Complainant had told Paschall how many
times Brown had made her have sex with him, Paschall said that Complainant
“indicated that it was definitely more than five times, maybe as many as ten. She did
not provide an exact number.” According to Paschall, Complainant told her that
Brown had instructed her not to say anything to anyone about what had been going on
or that he would go to jail.
12
C. Other Evidence
The State called other witnesses in addition to Complainant and Paschall,
including Sister and Complainant’s mother, who generally testified to some of the things
Complainant had told them about Brown’s abuse and about Brown’s behavior toward
Complainant leading up to her outcry. Complainant’s mother also testified that Brown
had once asked that Complainant be allowed to live with him, Carla, and Darla and that
Brown would treat Complainant like his own daughter by buying her things, assisting
her with rides from volleyball practice, and generally including her in activities with
himself, Carla, and Darla.
Other witnesses included the investigating officer, Darla, and Carla, who testified
that after the accusations against Brown having sexually assaulted Complainant came
out, Brown’s response was to “jab” a knife in his throat. Carla also said that she had
her “suspicions” that Brown had been inappropriate toward Complainant prior to the
accusations. Brown testified in his own defense and denied having ever sexually abused
Complainant.
D. The Verdict and Sentence
A jury found Brown guilty of the continuous sexual abuse of a child, and after
the punishment phase of trial, the jury assessed punishment at life in prison. The trial
court rendered judgment accordingly, and this appeal followed.
13
III. DISCUSSION
In his sole issue, Brown argues that the “trial court err[ed] by admitting into
evidence a summary of the forensic interview of the complaining witness.”4
Specifically, Brown argues that the trial court should not have allowed Paschall to testify
as to what Complainant told her during the forensic interview. We conclude that Brown
has failed to preserve this issue for our review, and alternatively, that Brown was not
harmed by Paschall’s testimony.5
4Brown has not told this court which statements Paschall made that he believed
to be inadmissible. He has complained only that allowing Paschall to “summarize”
what Complainant told her during the interview was impermissible hearsay. In his reply
brief to this court, Brown concedes that there were three areas that he believes Paschall
was entitled to testify about: (1) what Complainant said about an incident in the
bathroom, (2) what Complainant said about the kissing incident, and (3) the frequency
of the sexual contact between Brown and Complainant.
5 Because we have concluded that Brown has failed to preserve his issue for our
review and that, even assuming the trial court erred by admitting Paschall’s testimony,
Brown was not harmed by its admission, we need not address both parties’ arguments
regarding whether the trial court appropriately admitted Paschall’s testimony under the
rule of optional completeness. See Tovar v. State, 221 S.W.3d 185, 187–88, 190–92 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, no pet.) (holding that defendant’s cross-examination
of minor victim about part of contents of her videotaped statement to social worker
left false impression with jury regarding contents of statement, and thus remainder of
videotaped statement was admissible under rule of optional completeness); Smith v.
State, Nos. 01-10-00903-CR, 01-10-00904-CR, 2012 WL 1067946, at *2 (Tex. App.—
Houston [1st Dist.] Mar. 29, 2012, pet. ref’d) (mem. op. on reh’g, not designated for
publication) (holding that trial court did not abuse its discretion by allowing forensic
interviewer to testify about what complainant had said during interview under rule of
optional completeness after defense had cross-examined complainant about parts of
her forensic interview).
14
A. No Preservation of Hearsay Objection
To preserve a complaint for our review, a party must have presented to the trial
court a timely request, objection, or motion stating the specific grounds, if not apparent
from the context, for the desired ruling. Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1); Thomas v. State,
505 S.W.3d 916, 924 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016). Further, the party must obtain an express
or implicit adverse trial court ruling or object to the trial court’s refusal to rule. Tex. R.
App. P. 33.1(a)(2); Everitt v. State, 407 S.W.3d 259, 262–63 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013);
Martinez v. State, 17 S.W.3d 677, 686 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000). Because it is a systemic
requirement, this court should independently review error preservation, and we have a
duty to ensure that a claim is properly preserved in the trial court before we address its
merits. Darcy v. State, 488 S.W.3d 325, 327–28 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016); Wilson v. State,
311 S.W.3d 452, 473 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). Generally, a party must object each time
the objectionable evidence is offered. Geuder v. State, 115 S.W.3d 11, 13 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2003); Martinez v. State, 98 S.W.3d 189, 193 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003); Clay v. State,
361 S.W.3d 762, 766 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2012, no pet.).
Here, Brown objected only once to the forensic interviewer’s general testimony,
and his “hearsay” objection was never repeated. Brown did make another objection
during Paschall’s testimony, but it was not a hearsay objection. Thus, Brown has failed
to preserve his hearsay objection to Paschall’s testimony because he failed to object
each time she testified to what Complainant had told her, and he did not either obtain
a running objection or lodge an objection to the complained-of testimony outside the
15
presence of the jury. See Haley v. State, 173 S.W.3d 510, 517 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005);
Ethington v. State, 819 S.W.2d 854, 858–59 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991).
B. No Harm from Paschall’s Testimony
But even if Brown had preserved this issue for our review, we conclude that he
was not harmed by the admission of Paschall’s testimony. Improper admission of
evidence is not reversible error if the same or similar evidence is admitted without
objection at another point in the trial. Chamberlain v. State, 998 S.W.2d 230, 235 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1999); Leday v. State, 983 S.W.2d 713, 718 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998); Mayes v.
State, 816 S.W.2d 79, 88 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991); see Lamerand v. State, 540 S.W.3d 252,
256–57 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2018, pet. ref’d) (“The erroneous admission
of hearsay does not constitute reversible error ‘if other evidence proving the same fact
is properly admitted elsewhere.’”). In other words, when the erroneous admission of
evidence is cumulative of other properly admitted evidence proving the same fact, the
erroneous admission is considered harmless. See Brooks v. State, 990 S.W.2d 278, 287
(Tex. Crim. App. 1999); see also Burks v. State, 876 S.W.2d 877, 898 (Tex. Crim. App.
1994) (holding that police officer’s erroneously admitted hearsay testimony did not
harm defendant when testimony of other trial witnesses proved same facts).
This well-established harm analysis includes when evidence of what was said in
a forensic interview is erroneously introduced and yet the complainant has testified to
the same facts described in the interview. Stephens v. State, Nos. 02-15-00046-CR, 02-
15-00047-CR, 2016 WL 2586639, at *4 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 5, 2016, pet. ref’d)
16
(mem. op., not designated for publication). This is true whether the duplicative
evidence was testimony compared to the video of the interview or whether it was
testimony compared to another witness’s testimony. Matz v. State, 21 S.W.3d 911, 912–
13 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2000, pet. ref’d) (“Because the videotape is cumulative of
T.M.’s properly admitted testimony on the same issue, even if the trial court erred in
admitting the videotape, we must disregard the error because it could not have affected
Appellant’s substantial rights.”); see also Burks, 876 S.W.2d at 898 (“Because the
testimony at trial of Macias and Diaz proved the same facts that the State sought to
admit through the testimony of Price, we conclude that Price’s erroneously admitted
hearsay testimony did not harm appellant.”).
Here, as can be seen through a side-by-side comparison of their testimony,
Complainant’s testimony about what Brown had done to her and Paschall’s testimony
about what Complainant had told her during the interview that Brown had done are
duplicative of each other:
Complainant’s Testimony Paschall’s Testimony
“It was just in the morning when I woke “[S]he says he called her into the room,
up, and I don’t -- I don’t know, I just -- I that he had no shirt on and was laying in
don’t really remember how I got in there. the bed and told her to lay down, and that
I just remember me laying down on his he put his arms around her and just held
chest . . . and he had no shirt on and it her . . . .”
was dark.”
“I was, like, when I first woke up, I was “Yes. So she indicated that he woke her
scared. And then he was, like, it’s me, it’s up by shaking her and said it’s me, and
me, and I was just, like, oh. And then he then he kissed her on the lips, told her to
just started kissing me. . . . Oh, he was tongue kiss him and put his tongue in her
kissing me, like he grabbed my head. He mouth. And then she indicates that a
17
grabbed my head and was just . . . [kissing short time later, he did the same thing
me while using his tongue].” again.”
“One time he picked me up from “And she talked about how he had been
volleyball practice, and the night before messaging her on Kik, which is an instant
we were texting on Kik and he asked me messaging, like a text message app, and
to call him, and I said no. So the day that that he -- he had asked her to do
he came to pick me up the next day, he something, and she said why in the text
slapped me in my mouth when I got in exchange. And when he had picked her
the car and said, Don’t ever tell me no.” up that day, he expressed to her that he
was unhappy with her response and
slapped her in the face.”
“He parked -- like, you know like when “She said that he had told her he would
you go to a car wash and you have to do come pick her up and take her to get
it yourself and they have, like, the food, and that he drove around with her
sections? . . . . Yes, ma’am, to, like, block in the car, ended up parking at a car wash
the sun out. And he put [a sunshade] in and told her to get in the back seat, and
front, and he has tinted windows. So he put a sun shade up in the front windshield
has, like, the vacuum inside the car, like, and asked her to get in the back seat. And
the door’s kind of shut and the vacuum’s then she was laying down in the back seat
in the car, and we in the back seat and was and he was on top of her and had sex with
having sex.” her.”
“And we in the bathroom, and like I’m “[H]e called her into the bathroom and
sitting on, like, you know, like, the had sex with her in the bathroom and
counter against the mirror and then sent her out of the room . . . .”
everything, and he just pulls his pants
down and pull my pants down and we
have sex.”
“Right now the only one I can think “So she says that, in her words, that cum
about that we haven’t talked about was came out of there and that he asked her
when he asked me if he wanted -- where do you want it on your -- inside of you,
I wanted him to come. . . . That’s the one on your stomach, or in a towel, and she
he come on the towel.” said in a towel and he grabbed a towel.”
“[We had sex a] lot. I can’t keep track of “She indicated that [the number of times
how many times.” Complainant and Brown had sex] was
definitely more than five times, maybe as
many as ten. She did not provide an exact
number.”
18
Paschall’s testimony was nothing more than an accumulation of Complainant’s
testimony about the same acts and incidents where Brown made Complainant have sex
with him. Thus, we must consider the admission of Paschall’s testimony as harmless,
even if assumed to be improperly admitted hearsay, because Complainant’s same or
similar testimony was admitted without objection at an earlier point in trial. See Brooks,
990 S.W.2d at 287. We overrule Brown’s sole issue.
IV. CONCLUSION
Having overruled Brown’s sole issue on appeal, we affirm the trial court’s
judgment.
/s/ Dana Womack
Dana Womack
Justice
Do Not Publish
Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b)
Delivered: December 3, 2020
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