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from:
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<A HREF="http://www.usdoj.gov/jmd/2000-budget/index.html">FY 2000 BUDGET
REQUEST HIGHLIGHTS</A>
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FY 2000 BUDGET REQUEST HIGHLIGHTS

The Department of Justice's FY 2000 budget will provide a $317 million
increase over the 1999 level. The total $21.09 billion budget includes
$4.15 billion from the Violent Crime Reduction Trust Fund, and $2.55
billion funded through a variety of fees.

The budget highlights include:
�$1.28 billion for a 21st century policing initiative, helping
communities reduce crime by employing new technology and personnel.
�$122.55 million in increased funding to combat cybercrime and support
the Department's counterterrorism efforts.
�$738.24 million in increased funding to detain and incarcerate federal
prisoners, and to hire law enforcement personnel.
�$148.1 million in increases to fight drug abuse and curb drug
trafficking.
�$61.2 million in increased funding to provide state and local
assistance for the reduction of youth violence, the prevention of
juvenile recidivism, and to prosecute violations of federal firearm
laws.
�$22.61 million in increases for civil rights initiatives, including new
grants for health care provider protection.
�$152.35 million in new resources to guard against illegal immigration
and promote legal entry to the United States.
�$124.21 million to fund public safety initiatives on Indian lands.
�$93.13 million to improve the Department's information resources
management.
�$35 million in increased funding for the Department's litigation
efforts, including $20 million in new resources to recover the expenses
of federal health care programs for tobacco-related diseases.

CONTINUING THE FIGHT AGAINST CRIME AND YOUTH VIOLENCE

Crime has declined steadily for six consecutive years -- violent crime
rates have fallen more than 21 percent since 1993 -- the violent crime
arrest rate for juveniles has dropped 23 percent from 1994 to 1997. The
Department's FY 2000 budget request will provide funds to help
communities across the nation continue fighting, reducing and preventing
all aspects of violent crime and youth violence.

21st Century Policing Initiative

The Department's FY 2000 budget requests $1.28 billion for a 21ST
 Century Policing Initiative, a proposal that evolved from the COPS
program. The initiative is designed to help communities maintain and
reduce crime through a series of proposals aimed at assisting state and
local law enforcement agencies. The initiative relies on more law
enforcement officers on the street who are well educated, trained, and
equipped. The criminal justice community needs the newest technology
available to be able to keep pace with sophisticated criminals.

Law enforcement today must have a solid technological infrastructure.
This means possessing adequate computer hardware to utilize software
such as geographic information systems for crime mapping, and having
adequate resources to reduce the backlog of DNA samples. It means
providing interoperable wireless communication systems and global
information networks. It also means developing sophisticated technology
such as the ALERT car, and improving the overall forensic science
capabilities of state and local labs. The federal government cannot and
should not fund all these requirements. But it can provide seed money
for pilot projects, demonstration programs, one-time technological
upgrades and laboratory equipment. A systematic approach requires
addressing the needs of prosecutors as well as law enforcement. And it
means focusing efforts of community crime prevention.
�$600 million to hire more law enforcement officers and to provide
training, education and equipment. The resources will be used to fund
between 30,000 and 50,000 more law enforcement officers over the next
five years, with a focus on crime "hot spots." Of this amount, $25
million will be used to continue the discretionary grant program begun
in 1999 that provides bulletproof vests to state, local and tribal
governments for use by law enforcement officers. This funding also
includes $30 million to continue the Police Corps Program and $20
million for the National Police Officer Scholarship Program, which will
provide educational assistance to law enforcement officers. Another $20
million will fund programs to combat violence in schools and $50 million
will help economically distressed communities retain officers.
�$350 million to help state and local law enforcement agencies tap into
new technologies that will allow them to fight crime more effectively.
This Crime-Fighting Technologies Program will promote telecommunications
and systems compatibility among criminal justice agencies, foster
improvement of the forensic sciences capabilities of state and local
labs, and encourage the use of technologies to predict and prevent
crime. The program has three elements:
�First, $100 million will fund a Crime Analysis Program. This program
will provide money for research, technical assistance, evaluation, and
grants to use and improve crime-solving, data sharing, and crime
forecasting technologies. The funds will also be used to promote crime
mapping nationwide and to promote sophisticated crime analysis models.
This program will help police combine real-time information about crime
on the streets with the resources to find criminals and prevent future
crime in a highly targeted way.
�Second,$125 million will improve public safety communications. This
funding will be spread among several initiatives:
�$80 million for the Public Safety Wireless Telecommunications
Assistance Program. The goal of this program is to ensure that state and
local public safety wireless communications systems are compatible with
federal law enforcement radio systems. Currently, every federal, state,
and local law enforcement agency operates separate tactical radio
networks in every metropolitan area in the country. This program will
provide grants to states to help them develop comprehensive
telecommunications system plans and fund demonstration grants. The
program will assist jurisdictions in implementing public safety
communication systems, and offer technical assistance to help
jurisdictions in the planning and development process. Demonstration
grants will be administered by the Commerce Department's National
Telecommunications Information Administration.
�$20 million for the Global Criminal Justice Information Network
Initiative. This initiative seeks to develop a nationwide network of
criminal justice information systems where state and local authorities
will have immediate access to information needed to help them on the
job. With this funding, the Office of Justice Programs can expand the
assistance it is already providing to state and local governments by
funding a limited number of planning grants. The grants will be used by
states, which would work with their local governments to develop
strategies for integrating their existing criminal justice information
systems. Pilot projects will also be conducted. Funding will also be
provided to develop standards, guidelines, and protocols for information
sharing, and analysis tools to facilitate interoperability.
�$10 million for continued base funding for the NIJ Technology Centers.
These centers help law enforcement and corrections practioners identify
appropriate technology solutions for specific problems. For example, NIJ
helped Utica, New York improve its case closure rate for arson from 2
percent to 52 percent, with a 100 percent conviction rate, by providing
them with tools such as a digital camera system to record suspects'
faces at vulnerable buildings.
�$15 million for other police communications improvements, including
further development of the ALERT car. The ALERT car allows officers to
enter data electronically at the scene of a crime, accident, or traffic
stop, and receive responses without returning to their vehicles.
Officers may use hand held units linking electronically the information
from the car to the unit. The ALERT system also allows officers to
transmit accurate voices and images while at the scene. The open
architecture of the system will allow industry to quickly develop and
integrate new technologies in the ALERT car.
�Third, $125 million will provide for Crime-Solving Technologies, which
will promote the use of high-end technology, such as DNA analysis, to
investigate and prevent crime. This program has four elements:
�$15 million to eliminate the 1 million convicted offender DNA sample
backlog at state and local crime labs. Currently, analysts find one
"hit" or match per 1,000 samples entered into the FBI's national
database (CODIS). At this rate, eliminating the 1 million case backlog
could result in 1 thousand hits or more.
�$5 million for continued base funding for NIJ's DNA Research and
Development Program. The goal of this multi-year program, started in
1999, is to reduce the time and cost of performing DNA analysis.
�$55 million to establish the Crime Lab Improvement Program (CLIP). This
new program will be an expanded version of the DNA Identification Grant
Program. CLIP seeks to improve the general forensic sciences
capabilities of labs, by awarding grants to state and local governments
to improve their investigative and analytic capabilities. Funding will
also be used to provide research, technical assistance, and training to
help inform agencies about lab capabilities that are available
nationwide and to provide guidance on the types of equipment to
purchase.
�$50 million to upgrade criminal history, criminal justice, and
identification record systems; promote compatibility and participation
in federal, state, and local systems; and capture information for
statistical and research programs, as authorized by the Crime
Identification Technology Act of 1998. This expands the scope of the
Criminal Records Upgrade Program to include the purposes authorized
under this Act.
�$200 million for a Community Prosecutors Grant Program. This includes
$150 million in grants to hire, redeploy, and train prosecutors to
interact directly with the community (i.e, neighborhood DAs) and $50
million for innovative community-based programs.
�$125 million for a Community Crime Prevention Program, which will
provide grants that will engage the entire community in preventing and
fighting crime. Examples of how these funds could be used include:
involving faith-based organizations in juvenile crime prevention,
recruiting seniors to help police, establishing citizens' police
academies and teaching neighborhood residents problem solving skills,
promoting police partnerships with juvenile justice and child welfare
organizations, partnering with local environmental groups to crackdown
on gang-run illegal dumping in the inner city, and establishing
business-led police foundations that promote professional policing.
�$6 million for the Prisons at Work Demonstration Program. This program
will develop national models and strategies to assist state prison
systems that are trying to increase inmate employment and transition
offenders to full-time employment upon release.

Preventing Youth Violence

The Department's FY 2000 budget proposal includes $56.2 million to
reduce juveniles' illegal access to guns, conduct a full evaluation of a
program aimed at providing early intervention and offer a comprehensive
approach for reducing juvenile crime. The funds will also be used to
develop a program designed to prevent underage drinking, drinking and
driving, and alcohol-related crimes.

Office of Justice Programs
�$10 million earmarked within the Title V, At Risk Children's Program,
for the Prevention and Reduction of Youth Gun Violence. This program,
currently being implemented and evaluated in 4 cities, seeks to reduce
juveniles' illegal access to guns and address the reasons they carry and
use guns in violent exchanges. Communities participating in the program
are required to implement 7 program strategies which together represent
a comprehensive approach to addressing the prevention, intervention and
suppression of youth gun violence. This increase will enable the
Department to provide approximately $300,000 in grants to 20-25 new
communities to implement this program, $1 million to provide technical
assistance and training to assist the sites, and $1.5 million to help
evaluate this effort.
�$4 million to allow the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention (OJJDP) to conduct an evaluation of its Comprehensive
Strategy for Serious, Violent, and Chronic Offenders. This strategy
calls for early intervention for juveniles engaged in high risk
behaviors and a range of graduated sanctions to respond to the needs of
each offender while protecting the community. It is currently being
implemented in 5 states, with an additional 3 states identified to begin
implementation. This increase will allow OJJDP to evaluate the success
of the comprehensive strategy by tracking the number of sites that have
completed integration of the strategy into their performance review
process. Data will be collected regarding the juveniles served to
determine both how the strategy affected risk and protective factors,
and whether these changes resulted in a decrease in recidivism or
initiation of delinquent behavior.
�$35 million in grants for states and units of local government to
develop alternative methods of punishment for young offenders instead of
traditional forms of incarceration and probation. These methods would
include alternative sanctions, restitution programs, education and job
training programs, and correctional options such as electronic
monitoring and community-based and weekend incarceration.
�$7.2 million to fund a national demonstration initiative on alcohol and
crime. Of this amount, $4 million will be used to award grants to 13
communities to develop comprehensive community-level enforcement and
prevention programs aimed at combating underage drinking, drinking and
driving, and alcohol-related crimes so that the link between alcohol
abuse and crime can be broken. The remaining money will be used to
conduct additional research and develop statistics on the relationship
between alcohol and crime and to disseminate effective practices dealing
with alcohol abuse.

Firearms Prosecutions

United States Attorneys
�$5 million and 58 positions (41 attorneys) to conduct intensive
firearms prosecution projects. To reduce the threat of firearms
violence, this initiative is committed to insuring effective
investigation and prosecution of firearms offenders, violent felons who
possess guns, and armed drug traffickers; and to disrupting illegal
firearms markets through collaborative federal, state and local
partnerships. Building on the success achieved in reducing violent crime
in Boston, Mass., and Richmond Va., comprehensive strategic plans will
be developed for the prosecution, prevention and disruption of gun
violence through the cooperative efforts of law enforcement, local
government and community based groups.

CYBERCRIME AND COUNTERTERRORISM

The United States relies heavily upon its interconnected
telecommunications and automated information systems for basic services,
such as energy, banking/finance, transportation, and defense. The
Department's FY 2000 budget includes a $122.54 million increase to
expand efforts to protect the Nation's critical information
infrastructure from cyber-attacks and to fight domestic and
international terrorism.

Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC)
�$1.65 million to support the NIPC mission, by designing and
implementing a training regimen. This funding will provide for 5
regional conferences, 6 Joint Intelligence Community working groups, 50
state and local training conferences, and continuing education for cyber
investigators. The mission of the NIPC is to identify, investigate, and
prevent threats and unlawful acts targeting the critical infrastructures
of the United States. These acts include illegal intrusions into
government computer networks, protected civilian computers, and the
national information infrastructure. Under a Presidential Decision
Directive, all Executive Departments and agencies are instructed to
share information about threats, warnings of attacks, and actual attacks
on critical government and private sector infrastructures with NIPC.
��$11.39 million and 108 positions (60 agents) to create up to 12 field
National Infrastructure Protection and Computer Intrusion (NIPCI) squads
and provide equipment for 26 other field offices. NIPCI squads, the
field entity of NIPC, investigate computer intrusions and computer
crimes, provide investigative support to criminal and national security
investigations, and provide infrastructure security threat assessments.

Computer Analysis and Response Teams (CART)
�$9.86 million and 79 positions for 17 headquarters examiners, 62 field
examiners, forensic equipment, supplies, and new technology to keep pace
with workload increases and the complexities of computer-related crimes.
The widespread use of computers and the rapid advancement in computer
systems technology have combined to increase dramatically the volume and
complexity of computer evidence in high technology criminal
investigations.

Counter-Encryption
�$9.63 million and 13 positions to develop technological capabilities to
obtain access to plaintext in investigations where encryption is
encountered.

Network Data Interception
�$4.2 million and 7 positions to support court-authorized electronic
surveillance in cyber-intrusion cases involving computer networks.

Construction
�$9 million to modernize the Hazardous Devices School (HDS) at Redstone
Arsenal, Alabama. The HDS is the only formal domestic training program
for state and local law enforcement to learn safe and effective bomb
disposal procedures. The funds will help the school to make
modifications to accommodate additional classes and ensure students
receive realistic, high threat bomb disposal training.

Criminal Division
�$1.76 million and 13 positions (9 attorneys) to enable the Criminal
Division to keep pace with the changing legal and technological
environment. Computer crime continues to increase as more people develop
proficiency in manipulating electronic data and navigating computer
networks, and as worldwide access to the Internet continues to
skyrocket. The Division's attorneys are actively working with other
government officials (e.g., the FBI, Department of Defense, NASA), the
private sector (including hardware and software vendors and
telecommunications companies), academic institutions, and foreign
representatives to develop a global response to cyberattacks. These
attorneys, who are responsible for resolving unique issues raised by
emerging computer and telecommunications technologies, litigate cases,
provide litigation support to other prosecutors, train federal law
enforcement personnel and coordinate international efforts to combat
computer crime.

United States Attorneys (USAs)
�$7.3 million and 87 positions (55 attorneys) in support of computer and
high technology crime. The USAs need additional resources to handle
cases of national interest which are due, in part, to the rapid growth
of terrorism, computer and other high tech crimes. Increasingly,
attorneys are confronted with cases involving sophisticated computer use
by terrorists and other criminals. More prosecutors with an
understanding of computer technology are required.

General Administration
�$27 million for the Attorney General's Counterterrorism Fund,
established in response to the Oklahoma City bombing. The funds will be
used to reimburse departments and agencies for costs incurred in support
of countering, investigating, or prosecuting domestic and/or
international terrorism; to pay out rewards; to restore the operational
capacities of offices destroyed or damaged by domestic or international
terrorist acts; to ensure that essential government functions continue
during a time of emergency; to protect the Nation's critical
infrastructure; to pay for costs associated with the proposed National
Domestic Preparedness Office; and to help design the Federal Intrusion
Detection Network.

$2 million of the Attorney General's Counterterrorism Fund will be used
for the Federal Intrusion Detection Network (FIDNET). The FIDNET will
provide all federal agencies with intrusion detection systems, as well
as a centralized capability to analyze unauthorized entries. The
Counterterrorism Fund will also be used to support the initial design of
the system, which must be consistent with privacy statutes (e.g., the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 and the Privacy Act of
1974) and the statutory responsibilities to ensure computer security
(the Computer Security Act of 1987 and the Information Technology
Management Reform Act of 1996). As part of the design effort, DOJ will
conduct a comprehensive legal analysis of the proposed system.
�$357 thousand and 5 positions for the Office of Intelligence and Policy
Review to hire 2 attorneys and 3 paralegals to handle Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) applications and counterterrorism
work.

State and Local Domestic Preparedness Support
�$38.5 million and 7 positions to expand OJP's domestic preparedness
efforts. The President's budget proposes transferring to OJP the $135
million appropriated in the Counterterrorism Fund in 1999 for state and
local domestic preparedness assistance. In addition, it proposes
redirecting $31.5 million of these resources, which, when combined with
the requested increase of $38.5 million, will help fund the following 5
enhancements:
�$45 million for the Bomb Technician Equipment Program, which will
provide state and local bomb technician squads with the specialized
equipment necessary to detect and react to a chemical or biological
weapon. This program is administered through the FBI.
�$6 million to expand the First Responder Equipment Acquisition Grant
Program, which provides grants to help jurisdictions procure equipment
to protect first responders, detect biological and chemical agents,
collect the agents and decontaminate the environment. This equipment is
essential to building our capability to effectively respond to weapons
of mass destruction.
�$9 million for the operations of the Center for Domestic Preparedness
at Fort McClellan, Alabama. The Center houses the Chemical Defense
Training Facility, which is the only "live-agent" training facility in
the United States. It provides first responders with hands-on training
necessary to effectively plan for and respond to incidents of domestic
terrorism involving chemical or biological agents and nuclear and
explosive devices. With these funds, the training operations will be
able to remain at Fort McClellan despite the increased costs OJP will
face after the army base formally closes in September.
�$7 million for a new Law Enforcement First Responder Training Program,
consisting of a 2-day basic awareness course which will provide
"train-the-trainer" and "on-site training" approaches to law enforcement
officers. This will allow them to fulfill their role as first responders
to a weapons of mass destruction terrorist incident.
�$3 million to expand OJP's targeted technical assistance program,
designed to provide reactive, individualized technical assistance to
state and local jurisdictions participating in OJP's domestic
preparedness programs.

State and Local Cybercrime Training
�$1.9 million in new resources for a total of $3.9 million of
availability for the National White Collar Crime Center (NWCCC) to train
state and local law enforcement and regulatory agencies about computer
crime. The funds will support the NWCCC's role as the primary state and
local liaison and training arm of the National CyberCrime Training
Partnership. The NWCCC will also act as a clearinghouse, providing
information on all federal computer crime training available to state
and locals, as well as a "yellow pages" of resources available in
forensic computer science, as well as computer and network
investigations.

DETENTION AND INCARCERATION

The number of federal detainees has increased annually by an average of
13 percent during the past decade, and by even more the past few years.
The federal prison population has increased by 142 percent during the
past decade. The Department's FY 2000 budget provides $738.24 million in
new initiatives for detention and incarceration programs.

U.S. Marshals Service
�$119.6 million in added resources to fund costs associated with
approximately 8.87 million contract jail days, 2.1 million above the
anticipated 2000 base level. The detainee population, especially along
the Southwest Border, has grown considerably over the last few years due
to significant increases in law enforcement personnel at the FBI, Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA), and Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) Border Patrol.

Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP)
�$411 million and 32 positions for new prison construction. This request
consists of funding for the full construction costs of 3 prisons (2 of
which will add capacity for District of Columbia felons), site and
planning funding for 6 prisons (including 3 that will add capacity for
BOP to house long-term, non-returnable INS detainees), and construction
of inmate work program space.
�$86.81 million and 1,295 positions to activate 5 facilities (4,320
beds), scheduled to be opened in 2000: 1 minimum security camp; 1 medium
security facility with a camp; and 3 Metropolitan Detention Centers
(MDC's). Activation of the medium security prison with a camp in
Victorville, California, will add 1,408 beds, while the minimum security
camp in Forrest City, Arkansas will add 256 beds. These activations are
needed to address the 25 percent overcrowding rate systemwide.
Activation of the 3 MDC's in Houston, Brooklyn, and Philadelphia will
add much needed detention bed space (2,656 beds) in the Northeast and
South Central regions.
�$46.72 million and 18 positions for an additional 4,000 contract prison
beds to accommodate the increasing number of short and long term
non-U.S. citizen inmates and detainees, including 1,000 beds to enable
BOP to contract for the detention of 1,000 long-term, non-returnable INS
detainees.
�$34 million and 8 positions to meet the conditions of the National
Capital Revitalization and Self-Government Improvement Act of 1997,
which specifies that at least 2,000 District of Columbia sentenced
felons shall be housed in contract facilities by December 31, 1999.
�$27 million and 18 positions to modernize and repair the many aging and
overcrowded facilities that are in need of upgrades.
�$2.09 million and 31 positions for residential and community based
transitional drug treatment programs. This expansion will increase the
drug abuse treatment program capability by 2,000 inmates a year.

Office of Justice Programs
�$10 million for a total of $35 million for the Cooperative Agreement
Program (CAP) to enable the USMS and INS to obtain detention space in
cities where the detainee populations are large and detention facilities
are limited. CAP provides capital investment funding to selected state
and local governments in return for long-term, guaranteed bed space for
federal detainees or illegal aliens.

United States Parole Commission
�$1.02 million and 12 positions for the Parole Commission to continue
making parole decisions for District of Columbia Code prisoners, and to
assume its new responsibilities for parole revocation hearings for
District of Columbia Code parolees on August 5, 2000.

CURBING DRUG TRAFFICKING AND ABUSE

Drug use and its damaging consequences cost our society more than $110
billion annually. Drug abuse is a contributing factor to spousal and
child abuse, property and violent crime, the spread of AIDS, workplace
and motor vehicle accidents, and absenteeism in the workforce. Illicit
drug trafficking thrives on a culture of crime, violence and corruption
throughout the world.

To control the flow of illegal drugs and cut down on the demand, the
Department is dedicating $7.9 billion in FY 2000, an increase of 2.5
percent over FY 1999, including growth in both direct federal, state and
local assistance. Of this amount, DEA's law enforcement resources will
grow to $1.469 billion in FY 2000, including $23.073 million in program
enhancements.

Zero Tolerance Drug Supervision Initiative

Office of Justice Programs

A $112.1 million increase to fund a $215 million initiative in 2000 to
promote drug testing and treatment. The funds will support the following
three programs:
�$10 million in additional funding (for a total of $50 million) for the
Drug Courts Program, which targets nonviolent offenders. This
discretionary grant program allows for fund to plan, establish, or
enhance state and local drug courts that provide specialized treatment,
rehabilitation, and supervision of certain nonviolent substance-abusing
offenders.
�$100 million to establish a Drug Testing and Treatment Program that
would provide discretionary grants to states, local government, state
and local courts, and Indian tribes. The grants will support programs to
implement comprehensive drug testing policies and to establish
appropriate interventions to illegal drug use for criminal justice
populations. Systematic drug testing is an important tool for criminal
justice agencies concerned with controlling drug abuse among offender
populations. When compared to substance abusers who voluntarily enter
treatment, those coerced into treatment through the criminal justice
system are just as likely to succeed.
�$2.1 million to provide a total of $65.1 million for the Residential
Substance Abuse Treatment Program. This program provides formula grants
to states for use by state and local governments to develop and
implement residential substance abuse treatment programs. The programs
are conducted within state and local correctional facilities where
inmates are incarcerated for sufficient time.

Reducing Juvenile Drug Abuse

Office of Justice Programs
�$20 million within the Juvenile Justice Program for the Drug Prevention
Demonstration Program. The Drug Prevention Demonstration Program is
designed to develop, demonstrate and test programs to stress to young
people that drug use is risky, harmful and unattractive. In 2000, the
program will fund up to 280 new sites, reaching approximately 1,000
middle/junior high school students per site. The program will also
provide training and technical assistance to the 140 currently funded
sites, and evaluate the programs at the sites.

Monitoring Drug Abuse

Office of Justice Programs
�$4.8 million to expand the Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring System (ADAM)
from 35 sites to 50 sites -- the only federally-funded drug use
prevalence program which directly addresses the relationship between
drug use and criminal behavior. Increasing the number of program sites
will expand the ability to directly inquire into drug problems in
particular cities, and allow the program to more accurately estimate
drug use at the national level. In addition, the Department will
initiate an outreach effort to learn more about the relationship between
drugs and crime in understudied areas such as rural, suburban and Native
American lands in the 35 existing sites.

Drug Law Enforcement

Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
�$9 million and 27 positions for the Special Operations Division (SOD)
to establish a Telecommunications Section and to provide additional
support staff to meet growing security and administrative demands of its
electronic intercept program. This includes $7.72 million in special
funds to meet the immediate needs of the SOD enforcement investigative
operations. The main function of SOD is to manage and coordinate
multi-jurisdictional investigations between DEA offices and among other
federal agencies (i.e., FBI, U.S. Customs Service and the Department's
Criminal Division).
�$1.07 million and 25 positions for the Diversion Control Fee Account to
improve the quality of service to the registrants and to improve overall
management, including: $648,000 and 17 positions for the registration
process to improve customer service to DEA's registrants; $231,000 and 5
positions to improve the timeliness in conducting drug reviews necessary
for establishing appropriate regulatory controls (i.e., legal drug
scheduling); and $194,000 and 3 positions to conduct data analysis on
legal drug trends, which is necessary for identifying investigative
leads in illegal drug diversion activities.


Criminal Division
�$1.13 million and 13 positions (9 attorneys) to enable the Criminal
Division (CRM) to support DEA's SOD. Additional resources will enable
CRM to provide direct support to SOD, increase efforts devoted to
prosecuting the complex cases that result from SOD investigations, and
support the processing of Title III wiretaps.

Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Forces

In the FY 2000 President's budget, the Department proposes to eliminate
the consolidated Interagency Crime and Drug Enforcement (ICDE)
appropriation and transfer the resources from that account into the
direct appropriations of the participating components. The mission and
functions of the nine Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Forces
(OCDETF) presently supported by the consolidated appropriation will
remain unchanged by this administrative action. The budget requests for
the participating components reflect resource increases totaling the
base amount that would have been requested for the ICDE appropriation in
FY 2000, had it remained a consolidated appropriation. The OCDETF
Executive Office will continue to provide central management and policy
guidance for the program, including direct management of the State and
Local Overtime Program.

CIVIL RIGHTS

The Department of Justice plays a major role in the Administration's
efforts to protect the civil rights of all Americans. For the Civil
Rights Division, the FY 2000 President's budget seeks $82.2 million, an
increase of 19 percent over the 1999 enacted level. This represents the
largest increase for the Civil Rights Division in nine years.

The additional resources will enable the Civil Rights Division to
continue to play a critical role in coordinating civil rights
enforcement among all the federal civil rights agencies. The funding
also will permit the Department to significantly expand its
investigations and prosecution of criminal civil rights cases, increase
its fair housing and fair lending enforcement efforts, and address
violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Civil Rights Division

Prosecuting Civil Rights Violations

During FY 2000, the Civil Rights Division seeks additional resources to
devote increased attention to misconduct by law enforcement officials
and criminal violations of the nation's civil right laws. Specific
initiatives will include:
�$646 thousand and 10 positions (6 attorneys) to prosecute hate crime
violations.
�$401 thousand and 6 positions (4 attorneys) to continue efforts to
deter the victimization of migrant workers and other minorities -- a
violation of the involuntary servitude and peonage statutes.
�$1.08 million and 16 positions (10 attorneys) to combat police
misconduct.

Fighting Housing and Lending Discrimination

The Department's FY 2000 budget includes $1.87 million to improve the
battle against housing and lending discrimination. This increase
complements increased resources provided to the Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD) that will likely result in additional cases
being referred to the Department. Resources will be allocated as
follows:
�$996 thousand and 10 positions (3 attorneys) to expand the Department's
in-house Fair Housing Testing Program. The program uses pairs of testers
to root out discrimination based on race, color, sex, national origin,
disability and familial status.
�$596 thousand and 9 positions (5 attorneys) to enhance the Department's
fight against discrimination in home mortgage lending and in business
lending.
�$274 thousand and 4 positions (3 attorneys) to bring additional cases
resulting from increased activity by HUD.

Eliminating Discrimination Against Persons with Disabilities

The Department's FY 2000 budget includes $1.9 million to enable the
Civil Rights Division to continue and expand successful Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) initiatives, including:
�$1.3 million to support a mediation program that seeks to resolve
complaints as an alternative to litigation.
�$117 thousand and 2 positions to improve the Civil Rights Division's
ability to provide technical assistance, including advice from
architects, to assist small businesses and housing providers trying to
comply with the law.
�$479 thousand and 8 positions (2 attorneys) to certify that state and
local building codes meet ADA requirements.

Preparing for Redistricting

The Voting Rights Act requires certain jurisdictions to submit
redistricting changes to the Attorney General for review and clearance.
After the 2000 Census is conducted, the Department will experience a
surge of activity in this area. The FY 2000 budget includes the
following enhancements to effectively manage this requirement:
�$547 thousand and 12 positions to enable the Civil Rights Division to
meet its statutory requirement of reviewing certain voting changes and
redistricting proposals within 60 days.
�$933 thousand for technology improvements required to upgrade the
imaging system and conversion of microfiche documents.

Protecting Fundamental Opportunities

The Civil Rights Division requires additional resources to expand
programs which seek to protect basic civil rights. These enhancements
will provide resources necessary for improvements in the following
areas:
�$401 thousand and 6 positions (4 attorneys) to attack in-school
segregation, insuring that desegregation has been achieved, promoting
diversity, and insuring that non-English speaking students have access
to an effective educational experience.
�$274 thousand and 4 positions (2 attorneys) to address the concerns of
those in nursing homes and other institutions, who may be housed in
intolerable and dangerous conditions.
�$186 thousand and 3 positions (1 attorney) to fight immigration fraud
and inform the immigration communities of their rights under the law.

Community Relations Service
�$2.13 million and 30 positions for the Community Relations Service
(CRS). The funds will enable CRS to address racial violence, disorders
and conflict in states and local communities across the country. The
enhancement would fund 15 strategically located field offices staffed by
conflict resolution experts who will be more readily able to respond to
incidents across the country. Localized services will allow CRS to be
consistently on-site and maintain the ongoing working relationships with
local officials, law enforcement agencies and civic leaders especially
during times of community unrest and disorder.

Office of Justice Programs
�$5 million for grants to create Civil Rights Enforcement Partnerships
with state attorneys general. The partnerships will help address
specific enforcement issues within by hiring additional staff.
�$1.25 million in the Byrne Discretionary Program to address hate
crimes. This includes $1 million to develop and provide training for
state, local, and federal criminal practitioners, $200 thousand to
develop partnerships at various levels of government to respond to hate
crimes and to disseminate successful program strategies, and $50
thousand to partner with public and private organizations to develop
public service announcements to combat hate crimes.
�$1 million to add a hate crimes supplement to the National Crime
Victimization Survey (NCVS) to better estimate the amount of
bias-related crime.
�$500 thousand for the development and monitoring of felony case
processing information from a sample of jurisdictions. Study of this
data will expand the capacity of the Department to estimate the impact
of racial discrimination and the administration of justice.
�$4.5 million in the Byrne Discretionary Grant Program to provide
security assessments, and, where necessary, security improvements to
reproductive health clinics at high risk of violence. This initiative
builds on the Justice Department's National Task Force on Violence
Against Health Care Providers, which has been coordinating the
investigation of violence against women's health care clinics
nationwide.

IMMIGRATION

Since 1993, the Justice Department has removed more illegal aliens than
any other administration in history, increased Border Patrol agent
strength by 99 percent nationwide, added new technologies and fences,
strengthened worksite enforcement, made more than $1 billion available
to states to reimburse them for the cost of incarcerating criminal
aliens, and plugged loopholes that permit aliens who are not in danger
to use asylum laws to illegally enter and stay in the United States.

Landmark immigration legislation enacted in 1996 has challenged the
Department to carry out mandated responsibilities with far-reaching
impact. The Department's FY 2000 budget includes initiatives that seek
to strengthen proven, existing programs and to implement new measures
that will guard against illegal immigration and promote legal entry to
the United States. In response to this challenge, the Department has
greatly enhanced border management in the Southwest, and has
reengineered the naturalization process to accommodate millions of new
applicants and improve naturalization processing programs.

In implementing an aggressive border control strategy, the INS has
stemmed the tide of illegal immigration at traditional corridors of
unlawful entry. The INS has more than doubled its Border Patrol agent
workforce since 1993, and has introduced innovative deterrents and
advanced technologies to halt illegal immigration at the borders of the
United States. For 2000, the Department requests resources for
"force-multiplying" technologies and to support Justice Prisoner and
Alien Transportation System (JPATS) movements. Resources are also
included to increase juvenile detention bed space, and for Border Patrol
and detention construction. The Department's FY 2000 budget includes
$152.35 million for program enhancements, including fee accounts, for
both INS and the Executive Office of Immigration Review, for the
activities listed below.

Immigration and Naturalization Service
�$56 million and 90 positions for the INS National Border Control
Strategy. This initiative includes $50 million for force-multiplying
border enforcement technology called, the Integrated Surveillance
Information System (ISIS). INS will deploy ISIS surveillance technology
to about 200 sites in all 3 INS regions. Additionally, $6 million will
be used to add new border inspectors in Eagle Pass, Los Tomates, and
Laredo, Texas.
�$20 million and 185 positions for the INS Interior Enforcement
Strategy. This initiative includes $16.795 million to increase resources
available for the transportation and removal of aliens in INS custody.
Resources are also included to increase juvenile detention bed space and
to facilitate data entry into the National Crime Information Center
(NCIC) at the field level.
�$48.12 million for the planning and construction of new projects
directly supporting the Border Patrol program. These projects include
critically needed Border Patrol Station and Sector Headquarters space to
address already severely overcrowded conditions, as well as resources
for illegal entry deterrents such as checkpoint systems, border fencing,
and stadium lighting.
�$22.5 million for the planning and construction of detention
facilities. Included in this request are resources for the El Centro,
California Service Processing Center (SPC); Florence, Arizona SPC; El
Paso, Texas SPC; Krome, Florida SPC; and Port Isabel, Texas SPC.

Land Border Inspection Fee Initiative
�$3.21 million and 20 positions to staff the Secure Electronic Network
for Travelers' Rapid Inspection (SENTRI) lanes in El Paso, Texas and San
Ysidro, California and to continue the development of the network to
integrate SENTRI sites. The SENTRI pilot is intended to expedite the
legal entry of low-risk border crossers in non-commercial passenger
vehicles.

Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR )
�$2.52 million and 33 positions (5 Immigration Judges) for coordination
with INS enforcement initiatives that are estimated to increase
Immigration Judge caseload by 5,000 cases and Board of Immigration
Appeals (BIA) attorney caseload by 800 appeals in 2000. Critical to the
success of the INS initiatives will be the ability of EOIR to process
the resulting Immigration Judge and appellate caseload in a timely
fashion.

LITIGATION

The Department's FY 2000 budget includes $35 million in new initiatives
to perform its role as the nation's top law enforcement agency. As
responsibilities and caseloads continue to increase, the Department is
seeking additional resources to investigate and prosecute unlawful
activities, and protect the interests of the American people in court.

Civil Division

Medicare/Medicaid Fraud
�$5 million for audit work and automated litigation support in the
Columbia/HCA matters. Currently, the Civil Division is in the midst of
investigating Columbia/HCA -- which is the largest health care
conglomerate in the United States. Fraud has been alleged in virtually
every aspect of the conglomerate's dealings with federally-funded health
care programs. The Civil Division needs additional resources to fully
investigate the claims and to effectively prosecute responsible parties.


Tobacco Litigation
�$15 million and 50 positions (40 attorneys) to recover the expenses of
federal health care programs for tobacco-related illnesses. Like the
states, the federal government has expended considerable resources to
combat tobacco-related illnesses, and it has incurred significant
expenses through Medicare, CHAMPUS, the Veteran's Administration, the
Department of Defense, the Indian Health Service, and other federal
programs. With the resources requested, the Civil Division will continue
to pursue claims against responsible third parties to recover such
expenses.
�$5 million for the anticipated costs of expert witnesses in tobacco
litigation.

United States Attorneys

Defensive Civil Litigation
�$5 million and 76 positions (25 attorneys) to handle an expanding civil
workload in four areas:
�Tort Litigation: Work in the Torts area has increased in the past
several years due primarily to passage of the Health Centers Assistance
Act of 1992. The act provides that employees of health centers,
hospitals, clinics and other health facilities supported by the
Department of Health and Human Services are entitled to Federal Tort
Claims Act protection as the exclusive remedy for torts resulting from
the performance of their medical services.
�Employment Discrimination (Title VII) Litigation: the USAs' workload in
employment discrimination has been exacerbated by passage of relatively
new legislation. For the first time, the 1991 Amendments to Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 allow plaintiffs to recover compensatory
damages up to $300,000, no longer limiting awards to past and
prospective lost wages. For the first time ever, the Act also provides
for jury trials and the award of attorneys' fees.
�Social Security Disability Litigation: additional resources are needed
to address Social Security disability, and an increase in the number of
cases due to passage of the Welfare Reform Act of 1996, which now
disallows disability benefits based on alcoholism and drug addiction.
�Prisoner Litigation: additional resources are needed to address an
increase in the number of cases filed by a growing federal prisoner
population.

Child Support Enforcement
�$5 million and 95 paralegal positions to implement the provisions of
the Child Support Recovery Act of 1996 and the Deadbeat Parents
Punishment Act of 1998.

INDIAN COUNTRY

Because the investigation and prosecution of felonies in Indian Country
cannot be deferred to a county, state, or tribal jurisdiction, federal
law enforcement must provide an effective avenue of justice for victims
of violent crimes. The

FY 2000 budget proposes $124.21 million to fund public safety programs
on Indian land. Highlights include:

United States Attorneys
��$3.21 million and 36 positions (26 attorneys) to investigate and
prosecute crimes in Indian Country where Federal law enforcement is the
only avenue of protection for victims of such crimes.

Office of Justice Programs
�$10 million for alcohol and substance abuse treatment in Indian Country
(as part of the new Drug Testing and Treatment Program).
�$10 million from the Title V Incentive Grants for Local Delinquency
Prevention, for a total of $20 million. These resources will be used to
improve coordination and cooperation of tribal governments, federal
agencies, and other organizations serving Indian youth by developing,
enhancing, and supporting operations of tribal juvenile justice systems,
targeting alcoholism and substance abuse, and focusing on reducing the
incidence of crimes against children.
�$5 million to continue the Tribal Courts Program, which assists tribal
government in the development, enhancement, and continuing operation of
tribal judicial systems.
�$34 million for the construction of detention facilities in Indian
Country.
�$45 million for the hiring, equipping, and training of Indian Country
law enforcement officers through the 21st Century Policing Program.
�$5 million from the Police Corps Program. This new initiative will
increase the number of police in Indian country with advanced education
and training, and provide educational assistance to students who are
interested in public service in the form of law enforcement.
�$2 million to conduct a national census of tribal criminal justice
agencies and related statistical activities to improve the Nation's
understanding of crime and the administration of justice among Native
Americans. Currently, there is no coherent and uniform manner for
defining criminal conduct or victimization, measuring its incidence and
prevalence, examining the response to crime, assessing case processing,
or systematically understanding how criminal matters are adjudicated and
disposed of on Native American lands.

OTHER CRIME-RELATED INITIATIVES

The Department places a high priority on providing grants to state and
local governments so they may develop justice-related programs and
effective mechanisms to evaluate the programs. The FY 2000 budget
contains $12.5 million to help combat drug use, develop "smart gun"
technology, forensic technology and other initiatives.

Office of Justice Programs

National Institute of Justice
�$4 million to develop "smart gun" technology, designed to disable a
weapon that is not being held by its proper owner. Several different and
promising techniques on the drawing board for smart gun development
include: radio frequency, biometrics, voice recognition, and touch
memory. The goal of this program is to expand the development, testing
and replication of current technology and foster the development of
additional "smart gun" technologies in order to save the lives of law
enforcement personnel and law-abiding citizens.
�$2 million for the development of baseline data and national guidelines
for investigative and forensic sciences. This initiative will focus on
the development of national guidelines for the identification,
collection and preservation of both crime scene and eyewitness evidence.
In addition, a national survey of forensic laboratories and their
policies and procedures will be conducted to establish critical baseline
data. This will be the first-ever national survey of forensic
laboratories.
�$1.5 million to implement an International Crime Research Program to
provide support for Department components' international activities.
Criminal justice information will also be shared with an international
audience of practitioners and researchers. This program will help the
Department assist justice agencies in emerging democracies, by sharing
evaluative and technology-related practices with law enforcement and
criminal justice practitioners and researchers both in the United States
and abroad.
�$5 million earmarked within the Byrne Formula Grant Program to provide
evaluations of individual Byrne Programs. These resources will improve
the quality and scope of the evaluations of the Byrne Program that are
performed by the NIJ by dedicating a specific amount of funding for this
purpose. While these evaluations are statutorily required, no funding
has been appropriated for this purpose, so limited funding has been
available.

INFORMATION RESOURCES MANAGEMENT

The Department's FY 2000 budget includes an additional $93.13 million
for information resources management. This funding will improve the
information sharing abilities of the Department and upgrade much needed
legal and management tools. Highlights include:
�$38.8 million to move forward with the FBI's Information Sharing
Initiative (ISI) which supports the FBI's information technology and
Information Collection and Analysis strategy that is critical to the
success of FBI operations. To execute this plan requires a sophisticated
intelligence capability that depends on information collection,
processing, analysis and dissemination. The ISI system will allow agents
to get timely, complete information relevant to their cases, and will
provide them with the analytical tools to use this information
effectively.
�$4.33 million for systems development and to provide all FBI offices
with access to commercial, on-line databases needed for law enforcement
purposes. This program increase would also provide a fully operational
system that integrates and links transactional data with free text
information from investigative cases and other sources.
�$37 million for Legal Activities Office Automation (LAOA) to upgrade
critical legal and management tools. The funding will be used to finish
installing a new computer system for the Department.
�$13 million to accelerate Phase II of DEA's FIREBIRD automation
project, so that the installation of advanced computer network and
workstation equipment in all remaining DEA offices, including: District,
Resident, and foreign field offices; El Paso Intelligence Center;
Airwing; and forensic laboratories can be completed by the end of
calendar year 2001. Completion of the Phase II deployment will ensure
that all DEA offices are connected and "on-line," allowing the full
benefits of the information technology investment to be realized, and to
avoid costly legacy system maintenance costs.

OTHER INITIATIVES

In addition to the special initiatives, the Department's FY 2000 budget
includes $159.71 million for other enhancements. This includes funding
to improve communication, add new personnel and purchase new equipment
to enhance courtroom security.

Narrowband Communications
�$46 million in additional funding to accelerate the conversion of the
Department's wireless radio communications to narrowband operations.
�$10.62 million and 6 FTE will be used to consolidate wireless
communications management functions, including procurement, radio site
development, and spectrum management, and to support the permanent
establishment of the WMO.

U.S. Marshals Service
�$4.23 million and 60 positions to provide personnel necessary to ensure
that new courthouses and new courtrooms in existing facilities can open
on schedule with adequate security. Additional courtrooms and cellblock
areas create an additional staffing requirement for the USMS.
�$9 million to ensure that new and renovated courthouses will have the
necessary systems and equipment to ensure their safe and secure
operation. Adequate security systems reduce the need for detention
officers and contract guards, and provide the ability to monitor and
record crisis situations.
�$9.59 million and 131 positions are requested to handle the increased
workload generated by staff increases in other federal law enforcement
agencies and the U.S. Attorneys. Because it takes 18 months to 2 years
to hire and train personnel, this request is based on actual 1998
personnel increases experienced by the other agencies.
�$4.1 million and 9 positions to provide staff and resources for the
USMS construction and renovation program. USMS space is located in
federal courthouses nationwide, many of which are approaching 100 years
old. These resources will be used to eliminate security deficiencies.

Federal Bureau of Investigation
��$5.8 million and 56 positions to place an intelligence collection
management officer in each field office to enhance the FBI's ability to
collect information for use in individual investigations and programs.
Emerging threats, such as terrorists' use of weapons of mass
destruction, demand more resources than the FBI's current intelligence
capability can deliver.
��$5.33 million and 5 positions to collect DNA samples from federal
convicted offenders and to analyze and enter the DNA profiles into the
national Combined DNA Identification System (CODIS) database. The
resources requested will allow the FBI to collect and type approximately
15,000 samples from the current federal inmate population, and
approximately 5,000 samples from federal convicted offenders during 2000
and every year thereafter.
�$4.16 million to consolidate the FBI Laboratory's LABNET, consisting of
the National Integrated Ballistics Information Network (NIBIN) and the
CODIS, with the Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) - Wide Area
Network (WAN). The consolidation of LABNET with the CJIS - WAN will
improve delivery of services, enhance systems access, and provide secure
communications with state and local law enforcement partners.
�$5 million to purchase critical instruments and equipment for the new
laboratory. Due to the need for certain specialized equipment (e.g.,
mass spectrometers), resources are required in 2000 to provide adequate
time to construct, test, validate, and calibrate the instruments in time
for the laboratory activation. Over the last several years the FBI has
undertaken a major initiative to relocate the Laboratory Division from
its present space at the FBI Headquarters in Washington D.C., to a new
facility at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia. The new laboratory
will ensure that the FBI maintains its role as a leader in the
examination of forensic evidence, and continues to provide the
scientific and technological advancements required to successfully solve
crimes and assist state and local law enforcement investigations.

Antitrust Division

$6.37 million and 78 positions for civil antitrust matters. The
resources will enable ATR to meet its statutory requirements related to
reviewing and investigating the increasing number of mergers. Funds will
also be used for civil non-merger matters, which seek to reduce the
level of unfair competition.
�$3.18 million  and 39 positions to bolster the Division's ability to
enforce criminal antitrust laws.

Office of the Inspector General
�$415 thousand and 6 positions (2 agents) for investigative counsel and
criminal investigators to conduct special investigations and projects.
Special investigations are large, complex, sensitive projects undertaken
by the OIG, which require the interrogation of senior level witnesses,
the collection and analysis of large volumes of evidence, and other
specialized skills.
�$2.13 million and 31 positions (25 agents) for increasing investigative
responsibilities and workload of the Investigations Division. Staffing
increases will allow for more productive investigative hours, faster
responses to time sensitive allegations, reduced travel costs, and
on-site presence for enhanced intelligence sharing and coordination with
other law enforcement agencies. Resources will also be used to reduce
the average closure rate for investigations to 180 days in response to
Congressional concern regarding the timeliness of OIG investigations. In
addition, $131,000 will be used to replace damaged and defective
technical equipment.
�$5 million and 46 positions to provide resources to support OIG audits,
inspections, and investigations of INS programs and activities,
previously funded through a reimbursement agreement from the INS fee
accounts. Direct appropriations will provide a more streamlined and
efficient means of providing funding to the OIG, and will eliminate the
need for future reimbursements between the OIG and INS for fee-related
work. Furthermore, this will enable the OIG to apply resources to
monitor the effectiveness and efficiency of all INS programs and
activities, not just the fee accounts.

United States Trustees Program
�$4.9 million to provide new capability for word processing, database
management, communications, file-transfer, and security; and to support
the USTP's effort to deal with the ever-increasing number of bankruptcy
filings.

Office of Dispute Resolution
�$362 thousand to fully fund the operations of the Office of Dispute
Resolution (ODR) in the General Legal Activities (GLA) appropriation.
The ODR promotes the use of mediation and other forms of dispute
resolution in appropriate civil cases involving the United States. It
advises attorneys on dispute resolution strategies, identifies potential
private providers of dispute resolution services, conducts training in
negotiations and dispute resolution, and serves as the Department's
representative in dealing with other agencies, Congress and the public.
The Office also represents the Attorney General in monitoring and
supervising the activities of the Interagency Working Group on ADR, a
Presidentially established Task Force that promotes the use of dispute
resolution throughout the Executive Branch.

General Administration

Public Safety Officer Benefits
�$3.5 million for the Public Safety Officer Benefits' Disability
Benefits Program. Carryover funding in 1999 is insufficient to support
this program in both 1999 and 2000; OJP estimates that it will pay 6
claims pending from 1998, as well as an estimated 17 new claims in 1999.
This program increase will provide sufficient funding to continue to
support disability compensation for public safety officers, their
families, and their agencies before, during and after tragedies occur.

Radiation Exposure Compensation Trust Fund
�$21.71 million to provide payments to claims expected to be approved
under the Administration's proposed amendments to the Radiation Exposure
Compensation Act.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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