Blogs
Florida Exemptions
Florida is an "opt-out" state, which means that the federal exemptions are not used, except those referenced in Florid Statutes and others.HomesteadFlorida provides for a very generous homestead exemption, which though limited in the size of the parcel, the value of the real property is unlimited.Personal PropertyPersonal property in the amount of $1,000 is exempt, bu another $4,000 is allowed if a person does not have the benefit of a homestead exemption. Another $1,000 in equity in a vehicle is also exmption.Intangible Personal PropertyVarious other intangible prersonal property is also exempt, including some aspects of life insurance, disability insurance, social security, retirement benefits, workers's compensation, and unemployment benefits.Jordan E. Bublick is a Miami Bankruptcy Lawyer - www.bublicklaw.com
Florida Exemptions
Florida is an "opt-out" state, which means that the federal exemptions are not used, except those referenced in Florid Statutes and others.HomesteadFlorida provides for a very generous homestead exemption, which though limited in the size of the parcel, the value of the real property is unlimited.Personal PropertyPersonal property in the amount of $1,000 is exempt, bu another $4,000 is allowed if a person does not have the benefit of a homestead exemption. Another $1,000 in equity in a vehicle is also exmption.Intangible Personal PropertyVarious other intangible prersonal property is also exempt, including some aspects of life insurance, disability insurance, social security, retirement benefits, workers's compensation, and unemployment benefits.Jordan E. Bublick - Miami Bankruptcy Lawyer - Kendall & Aventura Offices - (305) 891-4055 - www.bublicklaw.com
By Tara Siegel Bernard
Tracy S., 59, a technical writer for a large bank, divorced her husband just as the
housing market spiraled downward. They were forced to sell their home, just
outside Phoenix, for less than they owed, and the bank agreed to absorb the
difference, about $25,000.
“Our ability to pay and our credit was perfectly fine, but neither of us could
keep the house individually,” she said. Ultimately the house sold for about
$175,000, or 21 percent less than they originally paid.
Three years after the short sale, Tracy is a homeowner once again. She bought
a three-bedroom house for $190,000 in another Phoenix suburb this year, and
qualified for a traditional mortgage with a 20 percent down payment.
“I believed and was told that I was not going to get a mortgage for the first two
years after the short sale,” she said, asking that her last name not be used to
protect her privacy. “But after that, I hadn’t really planned and didn’t think I
would be able to get a mortgage.”
So far, she has been in the minority. Through the end of last year, only a tiny
sliver of borrowers tarnished by foreclosures and short sales during the economic
downturn had bought homes again, according to a study by Experian, one of the
Big Three credit reporting bureaus. These borrowers are generally locked out of
the mortgage market for two to seven years, depending on their circumstances.
But now, four years since foreclosures and short sales peaked in the Great
Recession, millions of former borrowers have spent the required amount of time
on the sidelines, which means they have cleared at least one of the major hurdles
required to qualify for another government-backed mortgage. Whether the rest of
their financial lives have sufficiently recovered — or whether they even want the
burden of a new mortgage — are still open questions. But there is early evidence
that some former borrowers are slowly returning.
“We certainly have heard from a number of lenders that boomerang buyers
are coming back,” said Michael Fratantoni, chief economist at the Mortgage
Bankers Association. He added that the situation varied across the country
because the foreclosure process takes longer in certain states.
Bank of America, one of the nation’s largest lenders, said that of all its
approved loans and loan applications from January through September, only
about 1 percent came from consumers with short sales or foreclosures. But some
mortgage brokers report that more people are calling: Deb Klein, senior mortgage
loan officer at Cobalt Mortgage in Chandler, Ariz., said 10 to 15 percent of the
loans she closes are for people with distressed home sales in their recent past. For
Rick Cason, of Integrity Mortgage near Orlando, Fla., it is two to three loans out of
every 10. Erik Johansson, a mortgage lender in Chicago, calls it a “steady drip that
has been increasing over time.”
There is a range of different requirements for obtaining new loans. In August,
for instance, Fannie Mae tweaked its rules for borrowers who went through short
sales and those who voluntarily signed a home over to a lender (through what is
known as a deed in lieu). Fannie said it would continue to permit loans as soon as
two years after those events hit borrowers’ credit reports, as long as they could
document that something like a job loss or a divorce pushed them over the
financial edge. (They also need a down payment of at least 5 percent.)
But if they cannot prove they had a financial hardship, consumers must now
wait four years after the event. (Previously, borrowers without hardships could get
a loan after two years with at least a 20 percent down payment, or after four years
with at least 10 percent.) Someone who went through a foreclosure must wait
seven years after it was completed, or as little as three years with “extenuating
circumstances” (and make a 10 percent down payment). Freddie Mac has similar
guidelines, but it requires a 10 percent down payment for seven years across the
board.
Many lenders have tighter rules, regardless of what Fannie and Freddie
permit. And Bank of America, Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase all said they had
decided not to participate in the Federal Housing Administration’s Back to Work
program, where borrowers who experienced some form of financial upheaval, such
as a job loss, may be able to get a loan backed by the agency just a year after the
loss of a home. (Normally, the F.H.A. requires borrowers to wait three years.)
Since the program’s inception in August 2013, a mere 337 borrowers had received
loans through September.
Still, the pool of potential so-called boomerang buyers has increased: 3.5
million borrowers lost homes to foreclosure between 2006 and 2010 and an
additional 757,500 went through short sales, according to RealtyTrac, which
means they are all at least four years from the event. At least 5.3 million are
estimated to have met the period required for loans backed by the F.H.A., which
has less onerous rules but generally more costly fees and insurance.
“The behavior of these potential boomerang buyers will be a big part of
shaping the U.S. housing market going forward,” said Daren Blomquist, vice
president at RealtyTrac. “The bigger question now becomes how many have the
stomach for homeownership again and how many will stay as long-term renters.”
Only a small fraction of people had actually qualified for new mortgages
through last year: Of the nearly 5.43 million owner-occupied homes that were
foreclosed on after 2007, only 2.1 percent of the borrowers, or 114,100, had
repurchased a primary home through the end of 2013, according to Experian,
which reviewed 10 percent of its 220 million credit files.
And of the nearly 809,000 short sales on owner-occupied homes that
occurred after 2007, 44,300 or almost 5.5 percent of the owners bought another
through the end of 2013.
Tammy and Mike Trenholm completed a bankruptcy in 2009 and a
foreclosure in 2010. But in March, they bought a five-bedroom home in the
Atlanta suburbs for $300,000. They qualified for a loan through a program backed
by the Department of Veterans Affairs, which is more forgiving than other
programs: It will generally evaluate borrowers two years after a bankruptcy or
foreclosure.
Their housing troubles started in Charleston, S.C. They bought a
five-bedroom for $570,000 in 2005, when the housing market was still skybound.
The next year, they bought an empty lot on their block to build a new house. They
planned to sell the old one, making some money in the process. “But it didn’t turn
out that way,” Ms. Trenholm said.
Their contractor made several expensive errors. And by the time the new
house was ready, the market had collapsed and they could not sell their older
home for enough money. They ultimately had to file for bankruptcy, and the new
house was foreclosed on. That took a toll on their credit scores, which are
recovering. “It was a matter of enough time passing,” Ms. Trenholm said.
Even with the passage of time, for many former borrowers, the experience is
still fresh. “I see a lot of people coming back into it with eyes wide open,” said
Angel Johnson, a real estate agent with Redfin in Phoenix. “They can get a loan,
but they are still spooked.”
Copyright 2014 The New York Times Company. All rights reserved.
The Oregon Bankruptcy Court’s recent ruling in In Re Watt requires a mortgage holder to accept title to a home surrendered in chapter 13 bankruptcy. Prior to In Re Watt, a borrower could surrender a home in Chapter 13 bankruptcy but wait for months, if not years, on end while the mortgage lender took its time foreclosing on the property. This was a particularly cruel fate for Oregon debtors with ongoing HOA obligations, but really a hardship for just about any Oregon homeowner/Chapter 13 debtor hoping to walk away from a property and really start over.
Oregon consumers who are currently in confirmed Chapter 13 bankruptcy cases should contact their attorneys to determine whether they now have the ability to force their lenders to take back the house.
The original post is titled Oregon Chapter 13 Bankruptcy for Homeowners New and Improved , and it came from Portland Bankruptcy Attorney | Northwest Debt Relief .
Bankruptcy Provides Instant Relief When you file chapter 7 bankruptcy, the relief is instant. An automatic stay is created which is then sent to all of your creditors notifying them that you have filed for bankruptcy protection. Most collection efforts must cease from that point forward. You will have a meeting of creditors also referred+ Read More
The post Filing Bankruptcy Now Will Lead To A Fresh Start In 2015 appeared first on David M. Siegel.
One of the most frequent questions I get is: "How am I going to pay the attorney's fees and costs for a bankruptcy?"
Yes, we know you're seemingly strapped, but you actually have more resources than you realize.
Here are some:
1) Stop paying on the debt you are going to discharge anyway. In bankruptcy, almost all debts are dischargeable (wiped out). (There are a few, such as governmental fines, recent taxes, etc., but your bankruptcy attorney will identify them and discuss them with you.) The majority, such as credit cards, unsecured lines of credit, judgments, will be gone. Stop paying immediately and save up that money to finance your case. These are professional lenders, they understand.
And, by the way, once you hire an lawyer, you can stop the collector calls by simply telling them you have hired a bankruptcy attorney to prepare a case. Give them the name of your attorney, because they will call to confirm, and the calls will stop.
Professional lenders know they will be violating a court order by calling once you have filed, and since they don't know when you will file, as a matter of company policy, they usually stop the calls altogether. Whew.
2) Get a "loan" from your secured lenders. If you have a mortgage on a house you want to keep, you may actually be doing the mortgage lender a favor by skipping a couple payments to pay for your case. If your goal is to save your home, you will probably be filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy to catch up on your back payments -- "cure the default" -- and make your regular payments going forward.
Believe me, the bank does NOT really want to take your home. They are not in the real estate business. They are in the lending business. They want you to pay the mortgage and pay the arrears -- that's where they make money. If you skip a couple payments to get the money to set up a payment plan to pay them in Chapter 13, as well as freeing up more money by wiping out your other "junk" debt, such as credit cards, as a business matter, they won't mind. You're going to pay back the missed payments in the plan anyway.
3) Get help from friends and family. Now is the time to reach out. Everybody has somebody who will help. Think. Oftentimes, it's somebody from your community, such as church or social group, with whom you have an affinity that will be there for you. You may be surprised.
And here's the benefit to them: Once you're debt-free, you'll have even more resources to be able to pay them back. And no. Please, don't tell me you have no friends and/or no family. If that's the case, you may need a Dale Carnegie course. (Remember him? The author of "How to Win Friends and Influence People." Google it.)
4) Take a "hardship loan" from your retirement plan. If you have a retirement plan at work, call the administrator and see if you can apply for a hardship loan from the plan. Most plans have this feature. Make sure it's a loan, do NOT take a withdrawal. If you take money out of retirement plan (as opposed to a loan you pay back), you will have to pay taxes on it as well as 10% penalty. I see too many people turn a debt problem into a tax problem (which is way more expensive and onerous) when they take out withdrawals from the retirement plan to pay debts. It's a no-no.
5) Use your tax refund. Like accountants, January through April can busy months for bankruptcy lawyers. Many people use their tax refund to pay the costs of a bankruptcy filing. It may work for you, too.
6) Go hi-tech: Crowd-fund your case. The Wall Street Journal today ran an article on the innovative use of "crowd-funding" to raise money for a variety of personal projects and causes, including:
- A 26-year-old woman trying to raise $3,000 on GoFundMe.com to go to circus school to be an acrobat.
- A group of young women using Tilt.com to raise money from participants for a bachelorette party.
- A 55-year-old woman who got laid off from her job, needed a break and got her friends to chip in $5,000 for a trip to Italy.
A quick perusal of the sites showed a variety of causes seeking funds for help for medical bills or funeral costs.
Who knows? It could be the wave of the future.
There are other ways to get the money to pay for a bankruptcy filing, depending on your particular situation. Sit down with an experienced bankruptcy lawyer and discuss it. We're creative. Give our office a call.
One of the most frequent questions I get is: "How am I going to pay the attorney's fees and costs for a bankruptcy?"
Yes, we know you're seemingly strapped, but you actually have more resources than you realize.
Here are some:
1) Stop paying on the debt you are going to discharge anyway. In bankruptcy, almost all debts are dischargeable (wiped out). (There are a few, such as governmental fines, recent taxes, etc., but your bankruptcy attorney will identify them and discuss them with you.) The majority, such as credit cards, unsecured lines of credit, judgments, will be gone. Stop paying immediately and save up that money to finance your case. These are professional lenders, they understand.
And, by the way, once you hire an lawyer, you can stop the collector calls by simply telling them you have hired a bankruptcy attorney to prepare a case. Give them the name of your attorney, because they will call to confirm, and the calls will stop.
Professional lenders know they will be violating a court order by calling once you have filed, and since they don't know when you will file, as a matter of company policy, they usually stop the calls altogether. Whew.
2) Get a "loan" from your secured lenders. If you have a mortgage on a house you want to keep, you may actually be doing the mortgage lender a favor by skipping a couple payments to pay for your case. If your goal is to save your home, you will probably be filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy to catch up on your back payments -- "cure the default" -- and make your regular payments going forward.
Believe me, the bank does NOT really want to take your home. They are not in the real estate business. They are in the lending business. They want you to pay the mortgage and pay the arrears -- that's where they make money. If you skip a couple payments to get the money to set up a payment plan to pay them in Chapter 13, as well as freeing up more money by wiping out your other "junk" debt, such as credit cards, as a business matter, they won't mind. You're going to pay back the missed payments in the plan anyway.
3) Get help from friends and family. Now is the time to reach out. Everybody has somebody who will help. Think. Oftentimes, it's somebody from your community, such as church or social group, with whom you have an affinity that will be there for you. You may be surprised.
And here's the benefit to them: Once you're debt-free, you'll have even more resources to be able to pay them back. And no. Please, don't tell me you have no friends and/or no family. If that's the case, you may need a Dale Carnegie course. (Remember him? The author of "How to Win Friends and Influence People." Google it.)
4) Take a "hardship loan" from your retirement plan. If you have a retirement plan at work, call the administrator and see if you can apply for a hardship loan from the plan. Most plans have this feature. Make sure it's a loan, do NOT take a withdrawal. If you take money out of retirement plan (as opposed to a loan you pay back), you will have to pay taxes on it as well as 10% penalty. I see too many people turn a debt problem into a tax problem (which is way more expensive and onerous) when they take out withdrawals from the retirement plan to pay debts. It's a no-no.
5) Use your tax refund. Like accountants, January through April can busy months for bankruptcy lawyers. Many people use their tax refund to pay the costs of a bankruptcy filing. It may work for you, too.
6) Go hi-tech: Crowd-fund your case. The Wall Street Journal today ran an article on the innovative use of "crowd-funding" to raise money for a variety of personal projects and causes, including:
- A 26-year-old woman trying to raise $3,000 on GoFundMe.com to go to circus school to be an acrobat.
- A group of young women using Tilt.com to raise money from participants for a bachelorette party.
- A 55-year-old woman who got laid off from her job, needed a break and got her friends to chip in $5,000 for a trip to Italy.
A quick perusal of the sites showed a variety of causes seeking funds for help for medical bills or funeral costs.
Who knows? It could be the wave of the future.
There are other ways to get the money to pay for a bankruptcy filing, depending on your particular situation. Sit down with an experienced bankruptcy lawyer and discuss it. We're creative. Give our office a call.
One of the most frequent questions I get is: “How am I going to pay the attorney’s fees and costs for a bankruptcy?”
Yes, we know you’re seemingly strapped, but you actually have more resources than you realize.
Here are some:
1) Stop paying on the debt you are going to discharge anyway. In bankruptcy, almost all debts are dischargeable (wiped out). (There are a few, such as governmental fines, recent taxes, etc., but your bankruptcy attorney will identify them and discuss them with you.) The majority, such as credit cards, unsecured lines of credit, judgments, will be gone. Stop paying immediately and save up that money to finance your case. These are professional lenders, they understand.
And, by the way, once you hire an lawyer, you can stop the collector calls by simply telling them you have hired a bankruptcy attorney to prepare a case. Give them the name of your attorney, because they will call to confirm, and the calls will stop.
Professional lenders know they will be violating a court order by calling once you have filed, and since they don’t know when you will file, as a matter of company policy, they usually stop the calls altogether. Whew.
2) Get a “loan” from your secured lenders. If you have a mortgage on a house you want to keep, you may actually be doing the mortgage lender a favor by skipping a couple payments to pay for your case. If your goal is to save your home, you will probably be filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy to catch up on your back payments — “cure the default” — and make your regular payments going forward.
Believe me, the bank does NOT really want to take your home. They are not in the real estate business. They are in the lending business. They want you to pay the mortgage and pay the arrears — that’s where they make money. If you skip a couple payments to get the money to set up a payment plan to pay them in Chapter 13, as well as freeing up more money by wiping out your other “junk” debt, such as credit cards, as a business matter, they won’t mind. You’re going to pay back the missed payments in the plan anyway.
3) Get help from friends and family. Now is the time to reach out. Everybody has somebody who will help. Think. Oftentimes, it’s somebody from your community, such as church or social group, with whom you have an affinity that will be there for you. You may be surprised.
And here’s the benefit to them: Once you’re debt-free, you’ll have even more resources to be able to pay them back. And no. Please, don’t tell me you have no friends and/or no family. If that’s the case, you may need a Dale Carnegie course. (Remember him? The author of “How to Win Friends and Influence People.” Google it.)
4) Take a “hardship loan” from your retirement plan. If you have a retirement plan at work, call the administrator and see if you can apply for a hardship loan from the plan. Most plans have this feature. Make sure it’s a loan, do NOT take a withdrawal. If you take money out of retirement plan (as opposed to a loan you pay back), you will have to pay taxes on it as well as 10% penalty. I see too many people turn a debt problem into a tax problem (which is way more expensive and onerous) when they take out withdrawals from the retirement plan to pay debts. It’s a no-no.
5) Use your tax refund. Like accountants, January through April can busy months for bankruptcy lawyers. Many people use their tax refund to pay the costs of a bankruptcy filing. It may work for you, too.
6) Go hi-tech: Crowd-fund your case. The Wall Street Journal today ran an article on the innovative use of “crowd-funding” to raise money for a variety of personal projects and causes, including:
- A 26-year-old woman trying to raise $3,000 on GoFundMe.com to go to circus school to be an acrobat.
- A group of young women using Tilt.com to raise money from participants for a bachelorette party.
- A 55-year-old woman who got laid off from her job, needed a break and got her friends to chip in $5,000 for a trip to Italy.
A quick perusal of the sites showed a variety of causes seeking funds for help for medical bills or funeral costs.
Who knows? It could be the wave of the future.
There are other ways to get the money to pay for a bankruptcy filing, depending on your particular situation. Sit down with an experienced bankruptcy lawyer and discuss it. We’re creative. Give our office a call.
One of the most frequent questions I get is: “How am I going to pay the attorney’s fees and costs for a bankruptcy?”
Yes, we know you’re seemingly strapped, but you actually have more resources than you realize.
Here are some:
1) Stop paying on the debt you are going to discharge anyway. In bankruptcy, almost all debts are dischargeable (wiped out). (There are a few, such as governmental fines, recent taxes, etc., but your bankruptcy attorney will identify them and discuss them with you.) The majority, such as credit cards, unsecured lines of credit, judgments, will be gone. Stop paying immediately and save up that money to finance your case. These are professional lenders, they understand.
And, by the way, once you hire an lawyer, you can stop the collector calls by simply telling them you have hired a bankruptcy attorney to prepare a case. Give them the name of your attorney, because they will call to confirm, and the calls will stop.
Professional lenders know they will be violating a court order by calling once you have filed, and since they don’t know when you will file, as a matter of company policy, they usually stop the calls altogether. Whew.
2) Get a “loan” from your secured lenders. If you have a mortgage on a house you want to keep, you may actually be doing the mortgage lender a favor by skipping a couple payments to pay for your case. If your goal is to save your home, you will probably be filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy to catch up on your back payments — “cure the default” — and make your regular payments going forward.
Believe me, the bank does NOT really want to take your home. They are not in the real estate business. They are in the lending business. They want you to pay the mortgage and pay the arrears — that’s where they make money. If you skip a couple payments to get the money to set up a payment plan to pay them in Chapter 13, as well as freeing up more money by wiping out your other “junk” debt, such as credit cards, as a business matter, they won’t mind. You’re going to pay back the missed payments in the plan anyway.
3) Get help from friends and family. Now is the time to reach out. Everybody has somebody who will help. Think. Oftentimes, it’s somebody from your community, such as church or social group, with whom you have an affinity that will be there for you. You may be surprised.
And here’s the benefit to them: Once you’re debt-free, you’ll have even more resources to be able to pay them back. And no. Please, don’t tell me you have no friends and/or no family. If that’s the case, you may need a Dale Carnegie course. (Remember him? The author of “How to Win Friends and Influence People.” Google it.)
4) Take a “hardship loan” from your retirement plan. If you have a retirement plan at work, call the administrator and see if you can apply for a hardship loan from the plan. Most plans have this feature. Make sure it’s a loan, do NOT take a withdrawal. If you take money out of retirement plan (as opposed to a loan you pay back), you will have to pay taxes on it as well as 10% penalty. I see too many people turn a debt problem into a tax problem (which is way more expensive and onerous) when they take out withdrawals from the retirement plan to pay debts. It’s a no-no.
5) Use your tax refund. Like accountants, January through April can busy months for bankruptcy lawyers. Many people use their tax refund to pay the costs of a bankruptcy filing. It may work for you, too.
6) Go hi-tech: Crowd-fund your case. The Wall Street Journal today ran an article on the innovative use of “crowd-funding” to raise money for a variety of personal projects and causes, including:
- A 26-year-old woman trying to raise $3,000 on GoFundMe.com to go to circus school to be an acrobat.
- A group of young women using Tilt.com to raise money from participants for a bachelorette party.
- A 55-year-old woman who got laid off from her job, needed a break and got her friends to chip in $5,000 for a trip to Italy.
A quick perusal of the sites showed a variety of causes seeking funds for help for medical bills or funeral costs.
Who knows? It could be the wave of the future.
There are other ways to get the money to pay for a bankruptcy filing, depending on your particular situation. Sit down with an experienced bankruptcy lawyer and discuss it. We’re creative. Give our office a call.
CNN reports that the average student loan debt in the United States at the end of last year was nearly $30,000. In New York the numbers are almost as bad; the average is just over $25,000. Between 2008 and 2012, student loan debt rose a shocking six percent per year. Seventy percent of college seniors nationwide graduate with student loan debt, and 20 percent of that debt is owed to high-cost private lenders. So it makes sense that young people are drowning and looking for a life-line to escape from their sea of debt. Licensed attorneys can sometimes help. Unfortunately though, at least some non-attorneys who are claiming to throw out a life preserver are actually sharks.
The New York Times reports that the student loan debt settlement industry is filled with such sharks. These companies offer to help borrowers lower their monthly payments for a large up-front fee. Traditionally this tactic was used to go after desperate borrowers with credit card and mortgage debt, but young people with crushing student debt provide a new set of victims for these companies. This is particularly true since over half of recent graduates are unemployed or have low-paying jobs that do not even require the expensive college degree the young person is trying to pay off.
Illinois Attorney General Takes Action
One state, Illinois, is taking action to try to prevent these practices. Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan is suing two such companies, Broadsword Student Advantage and First American Tax Defense. The lawsuit claims that these two companies tricked vulnerable borrowers into paying for help that they never received. The young borrowers paid hundreds of dollars up front for services. Broadsword customers also paid just under fifty dollars a month for Broadsword’s so-called services. The suit alleges the companies misled the borrowers about these fees, and that the companies sometimes faked being associated with federal debt relief programs. Perhaps worst of all, the companies particularly targeted police officers, firefighters, and nurses for their services.
The Problem is Not Unique to Illinois
While Illinois is the only state to take action so far, it is not the only state with this problem. Nationwide borrowers have filed hundreds of thousands of complaints with the Federal Trade Commission about these companies. And the rate of complaints is growing. Given the number of colleges and recent college graduates in New York, hopefully action will be taken in our state to prevent these practices.
What this means for borrowers who are in over their head is that these companies should not be trusted. There are some federal programs in place that can help you with student loan issues. To find out about those programs you should contact the U.S. Department of Education. If your debt issues include more than just student loans, and bankruptcy is a possibility, you should contact an attorney at the Law Offices of Stephen B. Kass, PC to understand what options you have in your situation.
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