The Deck - Lawrence O'Connell (Jack of Spades, Washington DC)
Episode Date: April 5, 2023Our card this week is Lawrence O'Connell, the Jack of Spades from Washington DC. One Friday afternoon in 1994, 35-year-old Lawrence O’Connell seemingly vanished into thin air after leaving his work...place, and a disturbing discovery the following day left everyone with more questions than answers. If you know anything about the murder of Lawrence O’Connell in February 1994, please call the Metropolitan Police Department’s Synchronized Operations Command Center at 202-727-9099.  To learn more about The Deck, visit www.thedeckpodcast.com. To apply for the Cold Case Playing Cards grant through Season of Justice, visit www.seasonofjustice.org Follow The Deck on social media and join Ashley’s community by texting (317) 733-7485 to stay up to date on what's new!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Our card this week is Lawrence O'Connell, the Jack of Spades from Washington, DC.
One Friday afternoon in 1994, 35-year-old Lawrence seemingly vanished into thin air after leaving
his workplace, and a disturbing discovery the following day left everyone with more questions
than answers, even to this very day.
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is The Deck. An outdoor farmers market at the Robert F. Kennedy Stadium was still bustling with
activity when a man whom we'll call Don walked past with his dog.
Even though the afternoon sun had done little to warm up the chilly February day, a frigid
breeze wasn't going to keep Don and his dog from enjoying their Saturday stroll along
the Anacostia River.
But in the blink of an eye, Don's pleasant walk took a dark turn when his dog suddenly
made a beeline for a cluster
of trees along the riverbank.
In complete horror, Don realized what his dog was trying to get to.
Sprawled out along the tree line was the severely beaten body of what looked to be a middle-aged
man.
It was clear the man was dead, so Don immediately contacted Washington DC's Metropolitan
Police Department.
Jim Trainham was the uncle detective that weekend, so he quickly responded to the scene.
The victim was a white male in his thirties.
He was dressed business-like, except he had no sport coat on, but he had a tie and pants.
He had bindings around his two wrists. They were separated apart so
they weren't bound together but there's like he had been bound to a chair or something.
Several personal items were scattered around the man and investigators found a rock covered
with blood closer to the river which told police the victim hadn't gone down without quite
a fight. What wasn't at the scene though was a wallet or any kind of ID.
But just as they were trying to piece together who this man was, authorities from a neighboring
agency showed up.
They were from Fairfax County, which is a suburban county west of DC, and they said, earlier
that morning, they'd gotten a call from a woman named Maria, who said her 35-year-old husband
Lawrence O'Connell was missing.
So when they heard about this body being found, they had a suspicion it was the guy that they'd been looking for.
Maria told police, Lawrence was supposed to pick up their eight-year-old son from school the previous day when he got off work at around 4pm.
But at 5.30, she got a call from the school saying that he never showed up, which was completely unlike him.
So she started calling friends and local hospitals, trying to figure out where Lawrence was.
But now, police knew where he'd been.
Not only did the deceased man fit Lawrence's description, but he was also found just two
and a half miles from where Lawrence worked.
It took only a short time to officially ID him, as Lawrence's Ocono.
The following day, Lawrence's autopsy was conducted, and it was determined that his cause
of death was blunt-forced trauma.
They also found that his body was covered in defensive wounds, confirming what evidence
at the scene suggested that Lawrence fought his attacker or attackers until his last breath.
While the autopsy was underway, investigators worked to piece together a timeline of Lawrence's
last movements.
Detective Traenum reached out to Lawrence's bank and the credit card companies that he
used him requested his transaction history.
But this was 1994, a request like that wasn't as quick and painless as it is today, so
he knew it could take days to process.
In the meantime, investigators went to his workplace, Voice of America, which is an international
broadcasting network located in the heart of DC.
They were able to confirm that Lawrence had been there Friday, and he had signed out just
after 4pm.
Now, the Voice of America is located downtown on the mall, right in a very high tourist
area.
You know, a lot of rush hour traffic, pedestrian traffic.
Lawrence would park his car several blocks away in that parking space that he rented in
a condo parking lot.
When investigators checked, his car was still sitting in that lot, but they weren't sure
that meant he'd never made it to his car, because they were told that it wasn't parked
in his usual spot.
And Detective Trainham couldn't remember exactly, but supposedly, the car was either backed
in or pulled into the space, which was the opposite of how Lawrence normally parked.
Also the rear license plate had been bent upwards a bit, which they found strange.
So Detective's theorized that his car might have actually been used to abduct him, and
then maybe after he was killed, the killers brought it back to the lot.
Whatever happened, they knew one thing for sure.
We know that he left work and he never made it home.
Because it was a busy area of DC, especially around four o'clock on a weekday, and no
one had come forward yet about seeing a violent abduction in the area, police assumed the
kidnapping was something more discreet.
He could have met somebody that he knew and went with him voluntarily, somebody could have
come up with him and shown him a weapon hidden in such a way.
Obviously, it was clear to investigators that a lot of pieces were missing.
But a few days into their investigation, they got a call that helped them begin filling
in the gaps. The person calling was an employee at a local liquor store who said that they
had seen the media reports about Lawrence's murder and recognized his name. They recognized
it because, for the past few days, the store had been holding on to his credit card. Naturally,
after hearing this, Detective Traenum went right to the liquor store, not only to retrieve the card, but also to find out how and why they had a dead man's card in
the first place.
The employees told Traenum that they had the card since Friday evening when something
weird happened.
In a short white female wearing a baseball hat and glasses walks in, and she wants to buy
a bottle of Hennessy I believe in a carton of cigarettes and some snack food.
Again, this was 1994 and back then not all stores had the modern credit card reading machines
that you see today. Instead they used these carbon copy credit card imprinter machines where you'd
like insert your card and would make a physical carbon copy of your entire card and then you would sign that copy. So as she's signing for and somebody one of the employees walks in and says,
hey, the cops are out there giving parking tickets and she goes, oh my god, I can't get a ticket
and she ran out leaving everything behind, including the credit card.
The store held on to the woman's items and the card in case she came back, but she didn't.
Now, this weird lead seems promising, but they didn't have a photo of this woman, or even a real name.
They did have a signature, and even though it was obviously fake, if they ever found the woman,
they might be able to compare handwriting samples.
And finding her wasn't totally out of the question, because if she used the card at this liquor store, maybe it was used other places.
Soon enough, Lawrence's bank history came back and investigators learned that the card
had been used at multiple stores after he clocked out of work at around 4 p.m.
The first transaction was an attempted withdrawal of a few hundred dollars from an ATM about
20 minutes after Lawrence would have left work.
The attempt was unsuccessful, which police later learned was because Lawrence had an issue
with his account that he needed to rectify before withdrawing cash, but whoever was using
Lawrence's card, at this point, didn't let that deter them.
Sometimes later, I think it was about an hour or so later, we traced his credit cards
to a shopping mall down in Charles County, Maryland, which
is about 30 miles south of DC.
Now rush hour traffic on a Friday, you don't drop 30 miles south of DC unless you got
someplace to go.
Some place to be, it's just going to take a while.
But somebody had walked in to what was in a people's drug store, now a CVS, and used a credit card to purchase about $40 worth
of material personal items, just junk,
like a couple deodorant sticks, some stuff along that line.
And then they also, at the,
there was a Chinese restaurant next door,
where they purchased three orders of Chinese food.
Then about a half hour, 45 minutes later, something along that line,
they're back in DC, back on Capitol Hill, not very far from the bank where they went to
originally.
To summarize, Lawrence's credit card was downtown DC at an ATM shortly after four.
Then an hour later, it was 30 miles away at a shopping center and Chinese restaurant.
Then 30 to 45 minutes after that,
it was back on Capitol Hill in DC,
literally all over the place.
Investigators went to each location,
Lawrence's card was used,
looking for a description of the person who used it,
looking maybe for more signatures, anything.
But they got something even better.
The ATM that was used that afternoon
had a surveillance camera, and they got a hold of the footage.
The woman obviously in the ATM photo was trying to conceal her face, but she was wearing a baseball hat
with sparkles on it and glasses at that time.
And she had his pen number
and she kept trying to withdraw some money.
The woman looked exactly like the people
of the liquor store had described.
A short adult female with a baseball cap and glasses.
Now before seeing the ATM footage,
investigators weren't sure if the woman seen
at the liquor store was directly involved
in Lawrence's murder, or if she just happened
upon the card somewhere and decided to use it.
But since the ATM transaction occurred
less than 30 minutes after Lawrence clocked out of work,
and she knew the pin, they were now pretty confident
the woman was directly involved.
Investigators wasted no time and whipped up a sketch confident the woman was directly involved.
Investigators wasted no time and whipped up a sketch of the woman with a detailed description
to distribute to local newspapers.
The Washington Post reported that the woman was around 30 years old, five feet one inches
tall, 120 to 130 pounds, with strawberry blonde hair, freckles, and a quote-unquote rough
complexion.
Once the description and sketch were released to the public,
the floodgates were opened.
We had several tips we were running them all out,
but we had a couple that we thought were interesting
for various reasons.
So what we did was we went and we were able to obtain
handwriting samples from various sources,
not directly from these people, but from various sources.
Like court records where they signed for something.
One of them had been in under investigation for an incident in P.G. County.
They had written out a written statement.
And so we went back to the handwriting expert who basically said, okay, you know, here's
the signature.
Can we figure out if any of these people said?
And he came back and he pretty much said, we're 99%. He's like 80 or something like that,
percent sure that it's this person right here. And so that's pretty good. But so we thought we
had some good solid forensic evidence. The person, the handwriting expert, pointed the finger at, a 20-year-old woman who we've
been asked to call Susan.
Investigators learned that she was experiencing homelessness and was currently living in an
apartment at a local homeless shelter with two of her children, so police spring into action.
So we got an arrest warrant for her for credit card fraud and then a search warrant for her house,
hoping to find some kind of link not only to the victim but also to other people who she was
associated with. So early in the morning we go knocking on the door and we place her under a
rest and we bring her in for an interview. Really an interrogation. So you know going there,
why we search her place.
Trainham was one of the detectives questioning Susan that day,
and he remembers the hours long interrogation well.
It began with Susan vehemently denying
that she ever used Lawrence's credit card.
So, they asked her to submit to a voice stress test.
Now, a voice stress test is in a way kind of like a polygraph.
They claim that by measuring the tension in your vocal cords, when you answer questions
like you would a polygraph exam, you can tell whether or not somebody is being deceptive,
but just like a polygraph, you can see even more pseudoscience than a polygraph.
But we were being taught to use this as a tool and we were taught that it was
like close to 100% accurate. She took it, she failed it. This fueled investigators to double
down on their interrogation, which ended up lasting 17 hours. The tactics that we were using,
I'm not a screamer or anything at all, was that mostly we were looking for cooperation.
Look, you know, if we were
using the theme, we know that you didn't, likely didn't kill them, but you know, what
we'd need your help. And also, we confronted her with the handwriting expert. She finally
did confess and gave a detailed statement in which she admitted things and some of it
was right on the money and some of it was right on the money and
some of it was like crazy stuff that we just went, okay, so we took that to the prosecutor's
office and she was charged with the murder.
According to the Washington Post, Susan told investigators that Lawrence had earlier solicited
her for sex, but she decided she didn't want to do it, which made Lawrence mad, so she
and a couple of her male friends decided to rob Lawrence to, quote, teach him a lesson.
But like Trainham said, some of the things Susan said in her confession didn't sit right
with him.
She couldn't tell them what store she used the credit card that.
She got the names of the credit cards wrong, but it was still a confession, and it was
the operating assumption of nearly every law enforcement agency back then that nobody
who was innocent would confess to something they didn't do.
And she mentioned things in her confession that police hadn't made public yet.
So discrepancy is or not.
Investigators were confident that they had their mastermind behind bars.
And if this had been a single perpetrator,
we would probably have stopped right then and there
because, hey, we got to confession, now it's time to move on.
But since we had other suspects, perpetrators, we had to continue.
The search of Susan's apartment at the homeless shelter
found nothing of value.
But trainham thought maybe the administration
at the homeless shelter would be able to offer something,
anything, to lead them to possible shady acquaintances.
The shelter said the best thing they had was a log,
like a sign-in sign-out sheet that anyone entering
or leaving the shelter had to sign.
It was something that they were super strict about,
so Detective Trainham asked to see it.
And what it said made his jaw drop. Because
Susan's sign in and sign out times didn't match up at all with the timing of Lawrence's
kidnapping and murder. She was out that night, but she wasn't out during the critical times
that we needed her to be out in order to have, you know, participated in this. To be the places
that we knew or quote, non quote, knew that she was.
So we were stunned.
We were trying to figure out, okay, well, how could this be?
And they were very strict about it.
And so if she was to have people
co-conspire with her in order to forge,
they would have to be leaving spaces for her to sign in,
which would involve about half a dozen or a dozen so people.
And that would also take a lot of pre-planning, which people typically don't do, you know,
with these murders so.
Detective Trainum was beginning to question Susan's guilt, wondering if a completely innocent
woman was sitting behind bars awaiting trial.
So he took his findings to his superiors,
but his doubtfulness was largely ignored.
And once you commit yourself to something like this,
my department made a big deal.
We solve this murder.
He's all over the media and all that.
The US Attorney's Office had committed.
Now, here's a lowly detective saying,
hey, we may have the wrong person.
You know, there's something going on here.
It's hard to get the bosses to turn that train around.
So we had to do more work, and so we kept working at it.
Over the coming months, Detective Trainham
looked for other ways to prove that Susan wasn't their killer.
And one of the things that we finally decided,
we got to go back, what is the original basis of our evidence on this case?
It's the handwriting.
They had initially base their suspicion of Susan on one handwriting expert's testimony.
But what if that guy got it wrong?
They just wanted to double check with another handwriting expert.
Detective Trainham pulled some strings with a secret service and got permission to use
their handwriting expert.
At this point, police weren't relying on random documents and things Susan had written
on like they had the first time.
Now, they actually had what they called exemplars, where Susan had written out Lawrence's
full name.
Traynum handed the exemplars and credit card slips over to the handwriting expert and waited
for answers, which ultimately confirmed his fears.
He's absolutely positive, so she did not find these credit cards slips.
And so then I went back to my bosses and all that and I said, this is a problem.
And they said, no, it's not a problem.
Just get another expert.
Trainham followed orders and found another expert
to review the handwriting, this time from the FBI.
And just as Trainham suspected, the FBI expert
agreed with the secret service.
Susan did not sign those credit card slips.
And they said, by the way, who is the sky that you're using?
Because we've never heard of them, and we're a small community.
And it turns out that he works for another federal agency locally,
but he was being used by the prosecutor's office as an expert
because he was there and accessible.
He had been testifying as an expert several times,
but it
turns out that there's two schools of handwriting and one of the schools is
this one that teaches you how you can determine somebody's personality from
their handwriting and it's this total of the wall crap. And not only that, but he
was not only the agency's handwriting expert, but also their firearms
expert, their fingerprint expert, and we just know today that
that's, you just can't do that. I mean, you know, you got to focus in on one discipline.
The evidence had piled up. The homeless shelter log and the two separate experts from the Secret
Service and the FBI. So the prosecutor's office had no choice but to give in. After eight months of sitting in jail awaiting trial, Susan
was let go. The case was dismissed without prejudice, meaning she could be retried for
the same crime in the future.
We still were mystified about how did she know all these details.
This was something that continued bothering Detective Traenum and his colleagues, even
as they went back to the drawing board
and tried to track down other potential suspects,
but they'd lost nearly a year of precious investigative time
on trying to pin the crime on Susan.
And that was difficult to come back from.
The leads dried up and the media moved on.
And by the time the early 2000s rolled around,
Detective Traenum was tired of Susan's false confession
just eating away at him.
He wanted to find out where he went wrong.
He began going through things with a fine tooth comb, and he decided to watch Susan's
confession that he had filmed all those years ago.
And that's when he realized he hadn't just taped her confession.
Instead, he accidentally recorded most of the 17-hour interrogation.
Our policy was we didn't videotape everything before, like the entire interrogation.
But only the last part.
What we videotape the part where she said she found the credit card.
So we let the tape run.
Because of this, Detective Trainham was able to go back through and carefully examine
what went wrong and where.
And he came to the conclusion that he was the problem.
I realized that I now knew why she felt like she had to tell us something.
And then I realized how she learned.
And I started going back and doing research on this stuff.
And I thought that there was a lot of research out there as to how this
occurs, how false confession's happened, and this was just a textbook case.
Trainham realized that he had accidentally fed Susan, information during the interrogation.
All that information she, quote, unquote, knew, and all those details she gave that only the
killer would have known, he had inadvertently told
them to her.
But that wasn't the only problem Traynum found with the interrogation.
He was also very critical of his own techniques during the interview.
Back then, we were taught that long interrogations were necessary and that we were basically told that an interrogation did not end until
one the suspect confessed to they asked for an attorney or three you ran out of things
to say. And as you can tell here is I don't know what I'm going to say. So yeah, the normal
interrogation were considered normal,
I mean, long interrogations were considered the norm
and it didn't surprise anybody.
It wasn't just the longevity of the interview.
It was also how he approached the conversation.
It's basically the accusatory approach.
After I've determined that you're guilty,
I then go into interrogation
mode. And that's when I tell you that, look, we know you committed this crime. Our investigation
has proven it. We have all the evidence we need. There's nothing that you can say that's
going to change our mind. All we want to know is why. I can lie to you about the evidence.
Now, here's the thing with Susan. We did not lie to her about the evidence. Now here's the thing with Susan, we did not lie to her about
the evidence. One thing I didn't believe in lying because it's problematic for a lot
of reasons, the thing is what we were saying we believed to be true, but it wasn't. And
so it had the same effect as a lie.
What Traynum is referring to is the handwriting expert, which was later proven to be inaccurate
as well as the voice stress test, which he now refers to as pseudoscience, which of course
all of this they believed at the time and didn't realize they were working with inaccurate
or possibly exaggerated information.
That is scientific experts say that she's signed the credit card slips, that this scientific
machine has proven that she's lying
So what does that do that boxes you in? Oh my god, I'm gonna get convicted no matter what even though I'm innocent because of the science or maybe
The science is true. Maybe I did do it, but I just don't remember. That's what I think
Beyond that detective train him realized that he even said some things during the interview that could have been interpreted as indirect threats.
The thing is, I didn't like do threats, but they were implied up there. You know,
the thing is, if you're looking at doing gel time, what's going to happen to your kids?
Do you have to say it in order for it to be there in the back of your mind?
Trainum was flabbergasted.
He thought he'd been so careful,
but despite his best intentions,
he had contaminated a suspect,
which not only stole eight months of a young woman's life away,
but also led to months of an investigation essentially being made null and void.
And all of this is terrible for Susan and especially for her kids, but
there is something about this that feels like a breath of fresh air. I think a lot of times
when we see missteps like this, whether they're purposeful or not, they tend to be swept
under the rug. But Detective Trainum wanted to do what he could to make sure no one else
made the same mistakes that he did in that interrogation.
He actually went on to co-author a chapter of a book entitled Criminal Investigative Failures,
which I used as a source for this episode.
And in it, he talks about his involvement in Susan's false confession, and he became
a guest lecturer at colleges speaking about interrogation techniques.
Which again, this level of accountability is refreshing to see.
I'm not saying it fixes the mistake.
Doesn't magically repair the investigation
or give Susan or her kids those months back.
But Traynham's openness about his oversight
did and hopefully still is preventing others
from doing the same thing with their investigations.
As far as Lawrence's case, Traenham said there has been little movements since Susan
was let go back in 1995.
But it's not just because they got behind the ball with the whole false confession fiasco.
He said that because Susan was formally charged with Lawrence's murder, the case is technically
classified as closed at the Metropolitan Police Department.
Because that's how they keep stats.
Less than that you have five people who committed the crime.
Once you arrest one, the case is considered closed.
And it would counter the stat.
The policy was that even if the case never got to trial,
it would always remain closed.
So let's say that the case got dismissed before going to trial because your witnesses were
questionable or whatever like that or there's a problem with it.
It would still stay closed on the books.
Trainham said that he would bet a lot of money that no one is investigating Lawrence's
case now.
We can't confirm that because
the Metropolitan Police Department declined our request for an interview about Lawrence's
case. But the thought of Lawrence's case file, just sitting on a shelf collecting dust,
is something that bothers Trainham to no end, because he knows more could be done,
especially now with advancements in technology.
Things like the bindings, things like the tie, because of course the suspect would have
been pulling on the bindings, things along that line.
You could possibly get DNA off of them.
It's been nearly 30 years and Lawrence's family is still waiting for answers.
Answers they may never get because apparently to some, stats are more important than getting
real bad guys
behind bars and ensuring actual justice is done.
In closing, I want to make sure we don't forget who Lawrence was and the impact he left
on those who knew him.
Friends and family told the Washington Post in 1994 that Lawrence was a quiet and hardworking
man who loved traveling and learning new things.
In fact, he was taking lessons to learn Mandarin Chinese
at the time of his death.
But above all, he loved his family, a family that was forever
torn in two by his murder.
His son, his wife, and those who loved Lawrence
have waited long enough.
They deserve answers, and Lawrence deserves justice.
If you know anything about the murder of Lawrence O'Connell
in February 1994, please call the Metropolitan Police
Department at 202-727-9099.
And also, feel free to contact them
and let them know they should look into Lawrence's case
again, whether they consider it closed or not,
because no one has been held accountable.
The Deck is an audio chuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis
to learn more about the Deck and our advocacy work, visit thedeckpodcast.com
So, what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa