dandar vs scientology (amended complaint)
DESCRIPTION
Ken Dandar files an amnded complaint in his federal lawsuit against Scientology and adds David Miscavige as a defendant.TRANSCRIPT
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTMIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
TAMPA DIVISION
KENNAN G. DANDAR,and DANDAR & DANDAR, P.A.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGYFLAG SERVICE ORGANIZATION,INC., F. WALLACE “WALLY” POPE, JR.,JOHNSON POPE BOKOR RUPPEL &BURNS L.L.P., and DAVID MISCAVIGE,
Defendants.___________________________________/
Case No: 8:12-cv-2477-T-33EAS
FIRST AMENDED VERIFIED COMPLAINT FOR EMERGENCY PRELIMINARYAND PERMANENT INJUNCTIVE RELIEF, DECLARATORY JUDGMENT,
DAMAGES, AND DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL
Plaintiffs, KENNAN G. DANDAR and DANDAR & DANDAR, P.A., sue Defendants,
CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY FLAG SERVICE ORGANIZATION, INC., F. WALLACE
“WALLY” POPE, JR., JOHNSON, POPE, BOKOR, RUPPEL, & BURNS, L.L.P., and DAVID
MISCAVIGE, and allege:
INTRODUCTION
Pursuant to Rule 15, Fed. R. Civ. P., [within 21 days of service on Defendants, November
6, 2012], and Local Rule 4.01, of the Middle District of Florida, the Plaintiffs file their First
Amended Complaint as a matter of course. This is an action for emergency preliminary injunction,
permanent injunction, declaratory judgment, and damages under the Constitution and laws of the
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United States pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1981, § 1983, § 1985, and § 1986, as amended, alleging that
the Defendants, acting under color of state law, violated and are seeking to violate the Plaintiffs
fundamental rights secured by the Bill of Rights, i.e., the First, Fourth Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution to be free from state action procured by Defendants
to deprive Plaintiffs of their liberty and property interests, free speech interests, and denial of
substantive and procedural due process, by coercive and retaliatory governmental court orders to
Plaintiffs, ignoring state law and Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights. In particular, Plaintiffs seek
damages, but first, preliminary injunctive relief to prohibit the Defendants from going forward on
November 26, 2012 at a secret, closed to the public hearing in Clearwater, Florida to obtain a money
judgment in excess of one million dollars, or enjoin the execution of any judgment entered, which
will destroy the Plaintiffs, interrupt their representation of their clients, and cause utter financial ruin,
as a result of Plaintiffs obeying a court order issued by the Middle District of Florida, in Estate of
Kyle Brennan v. Church of Scientology Flag Service Organization, Inc., Case #8:09-cv-00264-SDM-
EAJ. Defendants seek to punish the Plaintiffs for filing a federal case in the Middle District without
prior state court notice or order that such filing was prohibited, based on a settlement agreement not
signed by Plaintiffs as parties; when such prohibition is violative of Florida public policy on lawyer
practice restrictions; involuntary practice restrictions which violate the Plaintiffs’ liberty and
property interests, free speech interest, and procedural and substantive due process of law under the
U.S. Constitution.
JURISDICTION AND VENUE
1. This Court has federal question jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §1331; §1343; and
42 U.S.C.A. §1981, et seq.
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2. Venue is proper in this court because Plaintiff’s office is in Hillsborough County,
Florida, Defendants’ offices are in Pinellas County, Florida, and Plaintiffs’ claims arose out of
conduct occurring in Pinellas and Hillsborough County, Florida.
THE PARTIES
3. At all times material herein, Plaintiff Kennan G. Dandar, is a resident of Pinellas
County, Florida, and a member in good standing with the Florida Bar, practicing law through his
Florida law firm, Plaintiff, Dandar & Dandar, P.A., located in Tampa, Florida, where he is a partner
with his brother, Thomas J. Dandar. (Plaintiffs hereinafter referred to as “Dandar”). The law firm
is the sole means of livelihood for the partners.
4. Defendant, Church of Scientology Flag Service Organization, Inc.; (“Scientology”),
is a Florida corporation doing business in Pinellas County, Florida, and Defendant, David Miscavige,
within his position of the entities comprising the Church of Scientology, is the worldwide supreme
leader over all Scientology entities, such as the Religious Technology Center and Defendant,
Scientology, regardless of the corporate structure. Defendant, Miscavige, not only micro-managed
the events leading to, and causing the death of Lisa McPherson in 1995, but also micro-managed the
criminal defense on behalf of the Defendant, Scientology, on charges brought by the State of
Florida, and micro-managed the civil defense in the civil wrongful death case brought by the Estate
of Lisa McPherson, where Dandar was the Estate’s counsel.
5. Defendants, F. Wallace “Wally” Pope, Jr., is a member of the Florida Bar; subject to
the Rules regulating the Florida Bar, and a senior partner of Defendant, Johnson, Pope Bokor,
Ruppel & Burns, L.L.P., located in Clearwater, Pinellas County, Florida, (Johnson Pope). Miscavige
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retained Pope and his firm, Johnson Pope, due to their political influence in Clearwater, Florida and
Pinellas County.
6. At all times material herein, Defendant, Pope through his law firm, Defendant,
Johnson Pope, was and continues to be the attorney for Defendants, Scientology and Miscavige.
UNDERLYING FACTS
7. In 1997, Dandar was retained by Fannie McPherson, the mother of Lisa McPherson,
to open the Estate of Lisa McPherson. Dandar then filed a wrongful death action against the
Defendant, Church of Scientology Flag Service Organization, Inc. (“Scientology”) in the Florida
Thirteenth Judicial Circuit Court in and for Hillsborough County (“ McPherson ”), which, in 2000,
was transferred to Pinellas County.
8. Clearwater, Florida is Scientology’s “Mecca” of spiritual perfection, a place where
it makes substantial money. It has always had an image problem in Clearwater and Miscavige was
intent on improving relations with the political powerhouses within the city and county. The death
of Lisa McPherson was a tremendous public relations nightmare to Miscavige and all of Scientology,
both locally and around the world, evidence that the Scientology “tech” did not work or could be
dangerous to health if misapplied, with McPherson’s death evidencing overwhelming signs of
intentional criminal conduct. Miscavige was therefore more intent on making the civil and criminal
cases “go away,” after having the General Counsel for Scientology destroy the last three days of
“caretaker notes” showing staff pleading to have McPherson returned urgently to the local hospital.
THE “GO AWAY” CONSPIRACY
9. In order to make the McPherson case go away, Miscavige retained Johnson Pope and
Pope due to their political connections in Clearwater and Pinellas County. Then Miscavige and
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Scientology retained a political consultant, Mary Repper, to set up meetings with politicians, judges,
and Scientology celebrities. This was all done to improve the image of Scientology and paint the
Estate of Lisa McPherson, i.e., the McPherson family members and its counsel, Dandar, as being
nothing but money hungry individuals. Miscavige personally contacted and visited on many
occasions the Medical Examiner’s attorney to convince him to convince the Medical Examiner, Joan
Wood, M.D., that Lisa McPherson did not die as a result of being held at Scientology’s Ft. Harrison
Hotel. He accomplished this by threatening to sue the Medical Examiner and by lavishing gifts on
the Medical Examiner’s attorney. As a result, the Medical Examiner changed her opinion on the
cause of death from severe dehydration to “undetermined,” but only after Miscavige signed a Release
not to sue the Medical Examiner. As a result of changing her opinion, the Medical examiner lost her
job and the criminal case was dismissed. Miscavige also offered the state attorney prosecuting the
case against Scientology hundreds of thousands of dollars, which was rejected. However, the
McPherson civil case would not go away, since the Estate had retained world class pathologists who
opined that the cause of death of Lisa McPherson was homicide.
10. The McPherson civil case required the Estate to have available substantial financial
resources. In furtherance of the conspiracy to make the McPherson civil case go away, the
Defendants also conspired filed a collateral lawsuit in Clearwater against Dandar and the Personal
Representative, with the goal of obtaining a multi-million dollar judgment against Dandar and the
Estate so that the civil case would not go forward by destroying the financial resources of the
Estate’s counsel. Defendants used that collateral case as a vehicle to attempt to obtain financial
information on Dandar to see how well he was financed to bring the McPherson case to conclusion.
Dandar refused to divulge this information and so the Clearwater judge permitted the Defendants
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to demand from the jury millions of dollars in punitive damages. As part of the conspiracy to
prevent the McPherson civil case from going to trial, after having failed to have the McPherson civil
case dismissed, Miscavige ordered Scientology counsel to file multiple motions to disqualify Dandar
in both the wrongful death case of Lisa McPherson, and in the collateral frivolous case brought by
the Defendants in Clearwater. Defendants also filed a federal suit in Tyler, Texas against the
McPherson estate, knowing that the Texas federal court had no personal jurisdiction. Defendants
ultimately did not prevail in the Texas federal case due to lack of jurisdiction, which was
subsequently determined upon appeal following a jury trial. The jury in the collateral Clearwater
case also found in favor of Dandar.
11. The Defendants, in furtherance of the conspiracy, sued Robert Minton, the financial
backer of the McPherson civil case, and then extorted him by finding his hidden assets in Europe
and then threatened him that they would report his unpaid taxes to the IRS and other governmental
entities, both here and abroad, including England and Nigeria. In furtherance of the conspiracy,
Defendants had Minton demand that Dandar dismiss the McPherson wrongful death case by having
Minton call Dandar from the Paul, Hastings New York law office of Samuel “Sandy” D. Rosen, co-
counsel in the McPherson civil cases, on Good Friday 2002. Dandar and the Estate refused this
extortion attempt. Then, Defendants had Minton fly to Clearwater and meet with Defendants in the
Defendant law firm’s office in Clearwater to concoct additional strategies to have the McPherson
case dismissed or Dandar removed as its counsel in the civil death case. The Defendants suborned
perjured testimony from Robert Minton in the wrongful death case and the Clearwater case to try to
get the civil death case dismissed or Dandar removed. During this same period of time, Scientology
sought to have Senior Judge Robert E. Beach appointed to preside over the case by filing motions
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to disqualify the presiding judge, the Honorable Susan Schaeffer. In furtherance of a joint
enterprise/conspiracy between Defendants and Judge Beach, while Scientology sought to disqualify
Judge Schaeffer, Judge Beach campaigned to become the presiding judge in the McPherson civil
case. Scientology sought out the Chief Judge to have Judge Schaeffer removed from McPherson,
but the request was denied. During the multitude of hearings spanning the entire summer of 2002,
Judge Schaeffer found that Scientology suborned perjury of Robert Minton affecting Scientology’s
counterclaim, which caused Judge Schaeffer to recuse herself from the case. The Chief Judge of the
Sixth Circuit then assigned Judge Beach to the McPherson case and entered an Administrative Order
creating Section 78 specifically for cases assigned to senior judges, and transferred McPherson to
Section 78. Dandar had repeatedly tried to set McPherson for trial, but Judge Beach refused to do
so in furtherance of the objectives of Defendants.
12. Flustered by his personal failure to have Dandar disqualified and more flustered by
the fact that Scientology attorneys, Defendant attorneys, failed to obtain a multi-million dollar
verdict and judgment against Dandar in the collateral Clearwater case, failed to obtain a final
judgment due to lack of jurisdiction in the Texas case, and Defendants’ failure to have the Personal
Representative, Dell Liebreich, removed from the Estate in a multitude of adversary proceedings
filed before the Probate Court in Clearwater, Miscavige and the Defendants, as part of the
conspiracy, then conspired to impede, hinder, obstruct, or defeat the due course of justice, with the
intent to deny the Plaintiffs the equal protection of the laws, interfering with Plaintiffs’ rights
guaranteed under the Bill of Rights, namely the First Amendment: liberty, property, the right of
association, and procedural and substantive due process, all to further the Defendants’ goal of having
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the McPherson civil case “go away,” by Miscavige ordering and paying another Scientology counsel
to meet ex parte with the presiding judge, Judge Robert Beach, in the McPherson death case.
13. In furtherance of the conspiracy, since Scientology never had any legal grounds to
dismiss the McPherson civil case or disqualify its counsel, Dandar, Scientology’s counsel, after
meeting many times with Judge Beach ex parte to gather sympathy for Scientology in the wrongful
death case, defamed Dandar in his business reputation and goodwill, and convinced Judge Beach to
contrive a defective and illegal procedure, not sanctioned by Florida law, to make the McPherson
case go away by simply removing Dandar as counsel for the Estate in the wrongful death case.
Attorney Lee Fugate repeatedly reported his results of his ex parte meetings to Defendants at the law
firm’s office in Clearwater, Florida. Apprised of the ex parte meetings and the plan to remove
Dandar, Pope did not object, but earnestly encouraged the ex parte meetings with Miscavige in the
presence of Marty Rathbun, who held the next to the highest position in all of Scientology. Judge
Beach, a state actor, joined in this plan and agreed to remove Dandar as counsel from the McPherson
case without any legal authority but only in furtherance of the conspiracy to violate Dandar’s rights
and make the case go away in retaliation for Dandar continuing to exercise his rights as guaranteed
by the Bill of Rights. Judge Beach was persuaded to demote Dandar as lead counsel or remove him
completely so that Scientology and Miscavige could strong arm the Estate’s new substitute counsel,
who was not a wrongful death trial lawyer, to accept a low and quick settlement, which Dandar and
the Estate had repeatedly rejected, and fulfill Miscavige’s goal of making the case “go away.” Now
the Defendants had a guaranteed plan to make the McPherson case go away by using the
governmental power of the presiding judge and all Defendants were of course wilful participants in
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this plan, knowing that interfering with the attorney-client relationship would violate Dandar’s
liberty and property interests, and other rights he had as guaranteed under the U.S. Constitution.
14. At all times material herein, Defendants, Pope and his law firm Johnson Pope, had
the power to prevent Miscavige and Scientology from going forward with this conspiracy to violate
Dandar’s rights, but intentionally chose not to do so, due to the large sums of money being paid to
Pope and Johnson Pope by Defendant, Scientology, under orders of Miscavige.
15. Acting under orders from Miscavige and in furtherance of the conspiracy, Pope and
his co-counsel, Sandy Rosen, then stood before Judge Beach at a hearing informing Judge Beach in
open court that the McPherson case would never settle if Dandar remained counsel for the Estate.
Acting on cue, Judge Beach agreed that Dandar was an obstacle to settlement, something Dandar had
never heard in his entire career which began in 1979. In furtherance of the conspiracy Judge Beach
had with Defendants to use the judge’s governmental power to deprive Dandar of his rights under
the Bill of Rights and in retaliation against Dandar for exercising his liberty and property rights in
is profession, and in violation of Dandar’s right to properly perform his duties in his livelihood by
advising his client on an appropriate amount to settle, which was not acceptable to Defendants,
Judge Beach then ordered Dandar removed as counsel for the McPherson Estate, and then and there,
appointed Dandar’s counsel from the Clearwater collateral case, Luke Lirot, to be lead counsel for
the McPherson Estate in the death case, without the consent of Dell Liebreich, the Personal
Representative of the Estate of Lisa McPherson. Beach ordered Dandar never to communicate with
Dell Liebreich unless Luke Lirot was present and that Dandar could never communicate with the
Defendants’ counsel in the wrongful death case. Beach refused to reduce this order to writing.
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16. The above conspiracy with Judge Beach, makes all Defendants state actors and acting
under color of state law in violation of 42 U.S.C. §§1983, 1985, and 1986.
THE LAST MEDIATION
17. The Personal Representative of the Estate of Lisa McPherson, Dell Liebreich,
appeared for the last mediation on May 26, 2004, and Dandar appeared without court order at the
request of his client, Dell Liebreich.
18. At the May 26, 2004, McPherson wrongful death case mediation, Scientology,
through Pope, insisted on a “global settlement conference” encompassing not only the court ordered
mediation for the McPherson case, but also the myriad of cases brought by Scientology and related
entities against Dandar or the estate. The Global Settlement Conference was never court ordered.
Because Dandar had been named as a party defendant in the collateral Clearwater case, Dandar, his
law partner Thomas J. Dandar and their law firm, Dandar & Dandar, P.A. (“the Dandar Law Firm”),
were also included as one of “the McPherson Parties” in the Global Confidential Settlement
Agreement, CSA. Sensing Scientology’s and Pope’s aim to create a conflict of interest between
Dandar and his client, the McPherson estate, Dandar agreed to a global settlement, releasing any
claim he had against Scientology at that time for no remuneration, so that the Estate of Lisa
McPherson could go forward with a settlement, because Judge Beach had already informed everyone
that the case would never have a trial.
19. At that settlement conference, Scientology and Miscavige, through Pope, also insisted
that Dandar sign a “practice restriction,” where he would agree never to sue Scientology again in
direct violation of the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar. Dandar refused. Pope then presented an
alternative clause which he called a “disengagement clause,” where Dandar would never participate
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in any adversary proceeding against Scientology. Dandar again refused to sign. Then the signature
line of the settlement agreement was worded by Pope so that Dandar did not sign in his individual
name, where the signature by a party is a requirement under Florida law to bind a party, but only
signed as “counsel” in the identical manner as the Estate’s lead counsel signed and in the same
manner as Pope signed. A Scientology officer signed for the Scientology entities and Dell Liebreich
signed for the Estate. No signature of Dandar, corporately or individually, appears on the settlement
agreement, but only as counsel. See attached CSA, Exhibit One, which states at ¶9 that only
Luke Lirot, not Dandar, has “actual express authority” to execute the CSA on behalf of clients
and non-clients, which is contrary to Florida law.
19. Even though the court-ordered McPherson mediation was changed by Defendants to
a global settlement conference, which was not court-ordered, the settlement agreement resulted in
settlement proceeds being paid by Scientology to Dandar’s special trust account only for the benefit
of the Estate of Lisa McPherson for McPherson’s injuries and death damages, with the sole
beneficiary being the Estate of Fannie McPherson. Dandar’s law firm received its fee from these
settlement proceeds and Dandar personally received no consideration for his participation in this
global settlement conference and CSA.
20. Thereafter, the McPherson case and a multitude of other cases brought by Scientology
were all dismissed with prejudice by signature of counsel only. Critically, after all executory
provisions of the CSA were complete, the McPherson case was dismissed on June 8, 2004, by the
filing of a Joint Voluntary Dismissal With Prejudice, without a court order reserving to the Circuit
Court for Pinellas County any jurisdiction to enforce the CSA or any continuing subject matter
jurisdiction over this dismissed controversy.
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21. The global “Confidential Settlement Agreement,” CSA, contains a “disengagement
clause” which provides in pertinent part that
[t]he McPherson Parties agree to full, permanent disengagement from the Scientology Parties, including no further anti-Scientology activity, and no involvement in any adversarial proceedings of any description against the Scientology Parties under any circumstances at any time. The Scientology Parties agree to full, permanent disengagement from the McPherson Parties, including no further anti-McPherson party activity, and no involvement in any adversarial proceedings of any description against the McPherson Parties under any circumstances at any time. For purposes of this paragraph, “Scientology” shall include the Scientology Parties and any Scientology related entities.
22. Reinforcing the fact that Dandar never signed the CSA in his personal or individual
capacity, underneath Dandar’s signature, the CSA provides the following:
Kennan G. Dandar, Esq., counsel for Dell Liebreich, both individually and a personal representative for the Estate of Lisa McPherson, and authorized signatory on behalf of the Estate of Fannie McPherson, the Estate of Ann Carlson, Kennan G. Dandar, Thomas J. Dandar, Dandar & Dandar, P.A., Lee Skelton and Sam Darden Davis.
(Emphasis supplied).
23. Following the execution of the CSA and releases, Scientology and the Estate of Lisa
McPherson executed voluntary dismissals with prejudice of every case, or satisfactions of judgment,
where no court reserved jurisdiction, particularly in the McPherson case. However, in violation of
the disengagement clause in the CSA, Scientology failed or refused to timely dismiss, and/or request
no further action in a federal case brought by one of the Scientology parties in federal court for the
Eastern District of Texas, which it ultimately lost following a week long jury trial due to lack of
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jurisdiction. However, the Scientology Parties’ entity in the CSA, RTC, where Miscavige is the
Chairman of the Board, was able to convince the appellate court that the McPherson Estate had
argued too many times in the district court the lack of jurisdiction, so the Fifth Circuit court awarded
partial sanctions against Dandar, plus some court costs, approximately 8% of what RTC claimed,
which Scientology advanced to a court order following the execution of the CSA, in violation of the
CSA.
THE KYLE BRENNAN CASE
24. On February 13, 2009, almost five years after the McPherson case had been settled
and dismissed with prejudice, and with no reservation of continuing jurisdiction by the Florida courts
to enforce this CSA or any continuing subject matter jurisdiction over this dismissed controversy,
and with no court order imposing a practice restriction, Dandar brought a wrongful death action on
behalf of the Estate of Kyle Thomas Brennan (“the Brennan Estate”) against Scientology in the
federal district court for the Middle District of Florida, Tampa Division. Positing federal jurisdiction
on diversity of citizenship, the complaint alleged that on February 6, 2007, 20-year-old Kyle
Brennan, while in a state of emotional turmoil, arrived in Clearwater, Florida, to visit his father; a
Scientologist, and that as a result of orders from Scientology, his father had taken Kyle’s Lexapro
from him and locked it in the father’s car trunk and told Kyle to pack his bags and move out. Then,
a day later, on February 16, 2007, while at his father’s apartment in Clearwater in a complex
occupied by Scientologists, Kyle Brennan died from a gun shot to the head.
25. The Brennan Estate’s complaint further alleged that Scientology caused Kyle’s death
by (1) negligently and recklessly depriving him, or causing his father to deprive him, of Lexapro, a
psychotropic medication prescribed for him by his treating psychiatrist; and (2) by negligently and
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recklessly leaving in the apartment Kyle occupied a .357 caliber handgun, the weapon with which
he was killed.
IN FURTHERANCE OF THE “GO AWAY” CONSPIRACY
26. Instead of moving in federal court to disqualify Dandar based upon their reading of
the CSA, and permitting the federal district judge to decide whether Dandar’s participation in the
Brennan suit violated its provisions, Scientology and Miscavige, through Pope, sought to retaliate
against Dandar for exercising his constitutionally protected freedom to practice law, and sought out
and conspired with state court retired Judge Beach to interpret the disengagement provision of the
CSA as demanded by Defendants to be a restriction upon Dandar from participating as an attorney
against Scientology i.e., a practice restriction, in violation of Florida law.
27. The Defendants filed a motion in the closed case of McPherson, instead of filing a
new lawsuit for the purported breach of the CSA, in furtherance of the ongoing joint enterprise and
conspiracy with Judge Beach to keep Dandar from suing Scientology by depriving Dandar of his
rights under the Bill of Rights with coercive governmental power.
28. The state court waived the legal requirements of the Defendants to pay a filing fee
and file a complaint to invoke the jurisdiction of the court, waived the requirement of the issuance
of a summons and paying the required fee, waived the requirement of process and service of process,
and permitted the Defendants to avoid the required random selection of judge assignment. Instead,
Defendants were able to select their judge, Judge Beach, all of which is against Florida law.
29. Dandar argued that the settlement agreement does not prohibit his representation of
the Brennan Estate and that, if it did, it would be unenforceable for violating public policy as well
as the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar, Florida Bar Rule 4-5.6(b) (“A lawyer shall not
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Judge Beach, Pope, and even the mediator’s participation in a practice restriction is a1
violation of Rule 4-5.6 (b), and Judge Beach was also required to report them to the Florida Barpursuant to Canon 3D(2).
A judge shall respect and comply with the law... The Commentary to Canon 2A states:2
“Actual improprieties under this standard include violations of law, rules, or other specificprovisions of this Code.”
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participate...in making...an agreement in which a restriction on the lawyer’s right to practice is part
of the settlement of a client controversy.”).1
30. Judge Beach, as part of the conspiracy with Defendants and contrary to clear Florida
law, with fundamental procedural irregularity and in retaliation for Dandar exercising his rights
under the Bill of Rights, and in breach of Canon 2A , Code of Judicial Conduct, held that he had2
jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter, which he obviously did not under Florida law,
that the settlement agreement prohibited Dandar’s representation of the Brennan Estate in federal
court, and that this prohibition was enforceable, regardless of the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar
and Florida Supreme Court decisions. On June 10, 2009, Judge Beach ordered Dandar to cease his
representation of all parties against Scientology other than the plaintiff in the now dismissed
McPherson action. Dandar appealed this order to Florida’s Second District Court of Appeal, arguing
that the settlement agreement is unenforceable as interpreted by Judge Beach under Chandris v.
Yanakakis, 668 S.2d 180, 184-186 (Fla. 1995), because it violates the Rules Regulating the Florida
Bar, is contrary to an Florida Bar published Ethics opinion, No. 04-2, January 21, 2005, and case
law, both state and Florida federal. In fact, practice restrictions violate most, if not all, state
regulations of attorney practice.
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Although the circuit court’s caption is Dell Liebreich as the Personal Representative of3
the Estate of Lisa McPherson v. Church of Scientology Flag Service Organization, Inc. et al., theFlorida Second District Court of Appeal changed the caption.
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31. On November 13, 2009, in sealed proceedings, the Court of Appeal affirmed Judge
Beach’s order without opinion. Dandar v. Church of Scientology, 25 So. 3d 1233 (Fla. 2 DCAnd
2009). 3
32. Prior to that affirmance, in August 2009, Dandar filed a list in excess of 230 trial
lawyers he had contacted to take his place in the Brennan case in his attempt to comply with the
illegal order of Judge Beach, before it was affirmed on appeal. Scientology, Pope, as well as Judge
Beach, knew that Dandar could not simply walk away and abandon his client in federal court,
pursuant not only to the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar, but also the Local Rules of the Middle
District, and Florida case law. Those rules and state law require that an estate be represented by
counsel, and withdrawal requires court approval.
33. On February 19, 2010, Judge Beach heard Scientology’s motion to enforce his order
of June 10, 2009, and Dandar’s motion to void the settlement agreement due to the several breaches
of the settlement agreement by Scientology as previously ruled by Judge Beach. In February 2010,
Judge Beach denied Dandar’s motion, and on April 12, 2010, at the behest of Scientology, Pope, and
in furtherance of the conspiracy, Judge Beach found Dandar in civil contempt of his orders of June
10, 2009, and February 19, 2010. He ordered Dandar to pay Scientology damages in the amount of
$50,000, as demanded by Defendants, even though the $50,000 penalty, if legal, only applied to
disclosing the confidential terms of settlement, and directed Dandar to file a motion to withdraw in
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the Brennan action in federal court; and ordered that if Dandar failed to withdraw from the federal
action, a civil penalty of $1,000 per day would accrue against him and the Dandar Law Firm.
34. In compliance with Judge Beach’s order, Dandar immediately filed in the Brennan
federal court case a motion entitled “Unopposed Involuntary Motion to Withdraw as Counsel for
Plaintiff.” Dandar labeled his motion “involuntary” because he was the Brennan Estate’s preferred
counsel, his client objected to the motion, withdrawal was against Florida law and Dandar’s rights
under the Bill of Rights, and the motion was state court ordered.
35. On April 22, 2010, the federal district court in Brennan denied Dandar’s motion to
withdraw seeing no legal barrier to his continued representation of the Brennan Estate after the
federal court reviewed the CSA proffered by Defendants. On May 6, 2010, however, Judge Beach,
as demanded by Defendants, and in furtherance of the conspiracy, directed Dandar to appear before
him to show cause why he and the Dandar Law Firm should not be held in indirect criminal
contempt of his prior orders of June 10, 2009, and April 12, 2010, citing Dandar’s “involuntary”
motion to withdraw in federal court as a willful violation of his prior orders, criticizing Dandar for
telling too much information to the Brennan court. Scientology’s proposed order for this criminal
contempt against Dandar and the Dandar Law Firm----a proposal which Judge Beach later adopted
in part----consisted of accumulated civil sanctions of $130,000 plus 6% interest, the suspension of
Dandar’s license to practice law in disbarment proceedings planned to be held by Judge Beach,
although Judge Beach has no such legal power, and the award of Scientology’s attorney’s fees and
costs, all in derogation of Florida law.
36. On August 25, 2010, the Brennan Estate filed an emergency motion in federal court
seeking a permanent injunction against Scientology and, if necessary, Judge Beach, to prohibit their
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interference with the federal court’s orderly progression of the case. On August 30, 2010, Judge
Merryday denied the emergency motion stating that “[t]he state court can neither command Dandar’s
withdrawal from this action nor otherwise interfere with the supervening federal jurisdiction;” and
that “[c]omity commands the federal court not assuming that the state court will enter an unlawful
order or interfere with the orderly administration of the federal court.”
37. Defendants, ignoring Judge Merryday’s order and in furtherance of the conspiracy
with Judge Beach, on August 31, 2010, went forward with a hearing before Judge Beach, at the
demand of Defendants, which resulted in further retaliatory sanctions against Dandar for continuing
to represent the Brennan Estate in federal court, as ordered by the federal court. Thus, Dandar was
being sanctioned for obeying the order of the federal district court.
38. On September 2, 2010, the Brennan Estate filed its second emergency motion in
federal court for a permanent injunction against Judge Beach and the Defendants, including a request
for sanctions against Scientology in seeking to impose further retaliatory sanctions against Dandar
for pursuing the federal action on behalf of the Brennan Estate. As the Brennan Estate alleged, Judge
Beach had “issued a severe sanction which interferes with [its] counsel’s ability to comply with this
court’s order [denying his motion to withdraw]” and which “is causing great, immediate and
irreparable harm and infringement on Plaintiff’s constitutional right in her choice of counsel.”
39. The Defendants, with the cooperation with Judge Beach, not only intended to retaliate
against Dandar and punish him for exercising his constitutionally protected right to practice law, i.e.,
his livelihood, with the coercive governmental power of Judge Beach, but intended to force dismissal
of the case as it had attempted in McPherson, also resulting in the deprivation of the Brennan’s
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estate’s constitutional right to its choice of counsel, and Dandar’s Sixth Amendment right to freedom
of association with persons suing Scientology.
40. In the federal Brennan case, Judge Merryday scheduled a hearing on this emergency
motion for September 28, 2010, and Judge Beach scheduled a hearing in state court for October 1,
2010, to also entertain suspending Dandar’s license to practice law in Florida, and enter a money
judgment as demanded by Defendants and in furtherance of the conspiracy. Although the state court
judge had already decided to enter a judgment of criminal contempt against Dandar consistent with
Defendant’s proposed judgment, together with an accompanying immediately executable money
judgment of $130,000 plus 6% interest, the parties, at the request of Judge Merryday, were
successful in having Judge Beach delay entering this judgment until after September 28, 2010, when
Judge Merryday would hear the Brennan Estate’s emergency motion.
41. On September 28, 2010, the district judge issued an opinion and order granting the
Brennan Estate’s requested injunction. Citing the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a), as well as “the
court’s inherent power to preserve its jurisdiction,” Judge Merryday permanently enjoined Judge
Beach and Scientology from assessing any sanction against Dandar on account of his representation
of the Brennan Estate in its federal action against Scientology.
42. District judge Merryday determined that by imposing criminal contempt sanctions
upon the Brennan Estate’s chosen attorney for pursuing his client’s federal remedies in federal
district court, Judge Beach “deprives the [federal] district court of the rightful opportunity to
determine whether Dandar is disqualified to practice in the Middle District of Florida and to
represent the Brennan Estate in this wrongful death action, to weigh the best interest of the Brennan
Estate, and to manage the district court’s docket.” Because Judge Beach could not compel Dandar’s
withdrawal from representation in a federal district court nor supercede its jurisdiction, independence
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and discretion by levying assessments on those who practice law before it, the district judge
concluded that at least as a matter of comity, the state court judge “should not undertake, directly or
indirectly, overtly or through a surrogate, to compel an act by another judge, especially in a different
jurisdiction.” (emphasis supplied). These findings and conclusions by Judge Merryday that Judge
Beach was the surrogate of the Defendants were never challenged by Defendants and are therefore
binding herein.
43. In an amended order of October 12, 2010, the district court reaffirmed its issuance
of the permanent injunction against Scientology and Judge Beach.
44. On October 13, 2010, Judge Beach entered an order in McPherson recusing himself
from any proceeding involving Dandar.
45. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), Scientology appealed this interlocutory order
granting the injunction, and on July 7, 2011, the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit reversed
and vacated the district judge’s injunction. It determined that the injunction against the Florida court
must have been entered pursuant to the second exception of the Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. §
2283, i.e., that this exception is construed narrowly, and that this case presented no circumstance
coming within it.
46. As for Judge Merryday’s concern about managing his own docket free of the coercive
orders of a state judge against an attorney appearing before him, the Circuit Court answered that the
propriety of those orders were under review by the Florida appellate courts and the “district court’s
conviction that a state proceeding has reached or is reaching an erroneous result does not alone
warrant an injunction against those proceedings.”
47. Dandar also appealed to the Florida appellate courts Judge Beach’s order of April 12,
2010, imposing contempt sanctions against him for obeying the federal court’s order. Dandar argued
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Although the circuit court’s caption is Dell Liebreich as the Personal Representative of4
the Estate of Lisa McPherson v. Church of Scientology Flag Service Organization, Inc. et al., theFlorida Second District Court of Appeal again changed the caption.
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that the Circuit Court for Pinellas County lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the CSA to enforce
its provisions; that the agreement cannot be construed as a practice restriction since that would be
void as violative of the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar; that only the Supreme Court of Florida can
place restrictions on a lawyer’s practice of law; and that Dandar cannot be held in contempt of an
order to withdraw from the federal case where the federal district court judge denied his motion to
do just that, and therefore rendered him powerless to purge any perceived contempt.
48. On February 11, 2011, again in a sealed proceeding, Florida’s Second District Court
of Appeal in a per curiam order without opinion, “[r]eversed the circuit court’s order to the extent
that it awarded $50,000 in damages against Dandar and in favor of [Scientology],” due to
Scientology, Pope, admitting that the settlement agreement in McPherson did not authorize such a
sanction, contrary to their position they had taken since 2005, but “affirm[ed] the circuit court’s order
in all other respects.” Dandar v. Church of Scientology, 59 So.3d 144, 145 (Fla. 2 DCA 2011).nd 4
It further ruled that Dandar was “procedurally barred” from raising this issue of the lower court’s
lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Id. On May 4, 2011, the Florida Court of Appeal for the Second
District denied Dandar’s motion for rehearing. Id.
49. On May 20, 2011, Dandar filed a petition for writ of prohibition with the Florida
Supreme Court seeking an order “directing the Second District [Court of Appeal] to issue an order
recognizing that the circuit court was without jurisdiction to enter any order subsequent to the joint
voluntary dismissal with prejudice filed on June 8, 2004, and [that it] exceeded its jurisdiction by
imposing a practice restriction and orders of criminal contempt of court.” (emphasis supplied). The
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Florida Supreme Court transferred the petition to the Florida Court of Appeal for the Second District
which denied it.
50. On September 6, 2011, the state Court of Appeals denied Dandar’s timely filed
petitions for rehearing and for rehearing en banc.
51. On October 3, 2011, Judge Merryday vacated the denial of Dandar’s motion to
withdraw and granted withdrawal nunc pro tunc to April 12, 2010. Judge Merryday found that Judge
Beach’s sanctions against Dandar for Dandar’s compliance with the federal order denying his
withdrawal, is “an unconscionable, irrational, and unsustainable injustice that immediately
threatens irreparable injury to Dandar and innocent third parties (including Dandar’s family
and clients), who depend upon him for their well being.” Judge Merryday found that the state
court’s “punitive enforcement of a contract construed by the Florida courts as a restriction on
the practice of law,” is “both unlawful and unethical.” Judge Merryday reiterated that Judge
Beach’s actions were a “punitive enforcement of an unlawful and unethical restriction on the
practice of law.” The Defendants did not appeal or otherwise challenge these findings of this court.
52. The Brennan estate brought a petition for certiorari to the United States Supreme
Court seeking review of the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, but it was
denied on February 21, 2012. Victoria L. Britton, as Administrator of the Estate of Kyle T. Brennan
v. Church of Scientology Flag Service Organization, Inc., U.S. Supreme Court Docket No. 11-722.
53. On October 10, 2011, Scientology through its attorneys, the Defendant, Pope, moved
in the Circuit Court for Pinellas County for the award of attorney’s fees, damages and other relief
incident to the contempt against Dandar and the Dandar Law Firm for breaching the settlement
agreement in the McPherson Action. Specifically, Scientology sought the award of its attorney’s
fees and costs for all services rendered in the Brennan Action in federal court; all appeals and
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petitions for review filed in higher courts relating to the rulings of Judge Merryday and concerning
jurisdictional issues; and all state court proceedings brought by Scientology to enforce the
McPherson settlement agreement up to the present hearings, all pursuant to Florida Rules of Civil
Procedure, Rule 1.730( c), which authorizes attorney fees only against a party for breach of a court-
ordered mediation, since the McPherson settlement agreement did not contain a prevailing party
attorney fee clause.
54. Dandar opposed the motion and sought reconsideration or the dismissal of
Scientology’s contempt action, and the imposition of sanctions including an award of attorney’s fees
and costs because of the “dishonesty on the Court” by Scientology and its counsel as well as their
attempt to impose an illegal practice restriction upon him.
55. Due to Judge Beach’s recusal in October, 2010, McPherson was transferred by
random rotation to Section 11, but then, without notice or order, transferred back to Section 78.
Another Senior Judge, the Honorable Crockett Farnell, assumed jurisdiction over the parties and this
case and the entire file remained sealed. In July, 2012, he ruled that because Dandar was found to
have violated the terms of the McPherson settlement agreement, under Florida Rules of Civil
Procedure 1.730( c), Scientology is entitled “to all reasonable fees and taxable costs incurred in this
Court, the Second District Court of Appeal, and the Florida Supreme Court commencing after
Dandar filed the complaint in the Brennan case on February 12, 2009, through these present
proceedings.”
56. In addition, Judge Farnell concluded that Scientology is entitled to all reasonable fees
and taxable costs “incurred in the Federal District court, the Eleventh Circuit Court, and the United
States Supreme Court relating to the Brennan case, including litigation relating to Dandar’s
involuntary motion to withdraw and the injunction issued by Judge Merryday, commencing on
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February 12, 2009, when the complaint was filed, until October 3, 2011, when Judge Merryday
entered the order granting Dandar’s motion to withdraw from that case.”
57. However, in view of Judge Merryday’s order of October 3, 2011, which granted
Dandar’s involuntary motion to withdraw nunc pro tunc to April 12, 2010, Judge Farnell recognized
the finality of this federal order as it related back to April 12, 2010, on grounds of comity and ruled
that neither Dandar nor the Dandar Law Firm would be liable for the $1000 per-day civil penalty
imposed by Judge Beach’s contempt order of April 12, 2010. However, Judge Farnell refused to
give the same order comity in reference to Scientology’s claim for attorney fees in the state and
federal courts. In a clarification dated August 10, 2012, Judge Farnell determined that Dandar’s
breach of the CSA was done in bad faith and all federal court proceedings were done in bad faith,
i.e., Dandar obeying the orders and rules of Judge Merryday’s orderly progression of the Brennan
case, conducting discovery, following the local federal rules, and providing representation of his
federal court client. A final hearing on the amount of attorney’s fees and costs due Scientology
under Judge Farnell’s rulings is scheduled for November 26, 2012, where Defendants are seeking
in excess of one million dollars in a closed-to-the-public-and-press courtroom in Clearwater, Florida.
Dandar moved to unseal the court file and have a public hearing, but Defendants objected and Judge
Farnell denied Dandar’s request for a public hearing, and denied Dandar’s demand for a jury trial
to determine damages, in violation of Dandar’ constitutional right to a public hearing and jury trial
on damages.
58. Reciting all of these events, Dandar and the Dandar Law Firm (“the Plaintiffs”) have
now brought this civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,et seq., against the Defendants seeking
damages, both compensatory and punitive, as well as declaratory and injunctive relief together with
an award of attorney’s fees and costs arising from the Defendants’ resort to state court and the
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judicial machinery in the Circuit Court for Pinellas County as well as the Florida appellate courts
in obtaining, and then enforcing, the contempt orders against the Plaintiffs in order to prevent them
from participating in Brennan, to tortiously interfere with the client relationship between Dandar and
the Brennan Estate and its Personal Representative, with the intent to force a dismissal of the
Brennan case.
59. Prior to the Defendants having Judge Beach impose a practice restriction on Dandar,
and before Dandar filed the Brennan case, Florida and all states considered practice restrictions to
be illegal and against public policy. Dandar was not forewarned, nor on notice, of a practice
restriction before the state court deprived Dandar of his property and liberty interests, in violation
of his constitutional due process and equal protection rights.
60. Prior to the imposition of the practice restriction (injunction), Dandar was not
forewarned or on notice that the state courts would not follow Florida Bar Rules, Florida Rules of
Civil and Criminal Procedure, Judicial Cannons, and Florida case law.
61. Dandar has a property interest in Rule 4-5.6, R. Reg. Fla. Bar, and that property
interest was violated when Defendants pressured Judge Beach to ignore the Rule. Dandar likewise
has a property interest in the following state procedural Rules, which all were violated by the state
court at the insistence of the Defendants, and infringed upon Dandar’s right to equal protection of
the laws:
• 1.140(h)(2) (the lack of subject matter jurisdiction may be raised at anytime, and case
law holds that it cannot be waived or created);
• 1.420(a) (a court is divested of jurisdiction after voluntary dismissal);
• 1.430 (a right to trial by jury);
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• 1.730 (sanctions may only be imposed against a party in a pending case who was
court-ordered to mediate and who signed the mediation agreement);
• 3.840 (Judge Beach was required to recuse himself and the Chief Justice of Florida
Supreme Court was to appoint his replacement to determine contempt sanctions, if
any);
• and all case law interpreting the above rules.
62. The Defendants acted under color of state law and their conduct amounted to state
action when they knowingly invoked the processes of the Florida state courts by entering into a
conspiracy with Judge Beach to deprive the Plaintiffs of their Constitutional rights of liberty,
association, property, and due process by abusive governmental power of the state court, while the
Brennan Action was pending, for the specific reason to get the Brennan case dismissed and to make
contumacious the Plaintiffs’ representation of the Brennan Estate in federal court.
63. That by invoking the state court to impose a practice restriction, particularly in a court
lacking subject matter jurisdiction, and thereby prevent the Plaintiffs from representing the Brennan
Estate in seeking redress for its injuries in federal court, the Defendants violated the Plaintiffs’ rights
under the First, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, such as liberty
and property, free speech, the right to practice law and to represent a particular party, damage to
business reputation and goodwill, to procedural and substantive due process and to the equal
protection of the laws. These serial violations by the Defendants resulted in the Plaintiffs’ illegal
and unconstitutional removal from the Brennan Action, one characterized by federal judge Merryday
as “unethical and illegal,” another determination of fact and law, which was never challenged on
appeal in the federal forum by the Defendants and which is now final.
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64. The state action prosecuted by the Defendants permanently enjoins the Plaintiffs from
representing any party against Scientology anywhere and at any time in the future, in any jurisdiction,
which also affects interstate commerce since Plaintiff has recently turned down several
wrongful death cases due to this illegal practice restriction, depriving the Plaintiffs of their past,
present and future right to pursue a livelihood as an attorney to the detriment of Dandar’s
constitutional rights, all as a result of the conspiracy with the state court, Judge Beach. The state
action is pending and has not resulted in a final judgment, but is scheduled for final hearing on
November 26, 2012, in the closed-to-the-public courtroom.
65. The Defendants’ enforcement of this presumed practice restriction through their
conspiracy with the Florida’s court has operated to subject the Plaintiffs to unwarranted civil
contempt proceedings which have, in turn, ripened into criminal contempt proceedings resulting in
monetary sanctions against Dandar and the Dandar Law Firm (in the form of an award of attorney’s
fees and costs), claimed to be in excess of one million dollars, which are unfair, punitive and
unconstitutional.
66. At all times material herein, Defendants were acting under color of state law by
utilizing the state laws, state judges, and state courts; by conspiring and acting together with, or
having obtained significant aid from State officials, or because their conduct is otherwise chargeable
to the State and is in such a close nexus between the State and the Defendants’ conduct to deprive
Plaintiffs of property interests and other interests protected by the U.S. Constitution.
CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs request the following relief:
1. Enter preliminary and permanent injunctions enjoining the Defendants, their officers,
employees, agents, attorneys and successors, and all persons in active concert or participating with
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any of them, from actively assisting the state judges or courts in their efforts to interfere with the
Plaintiffs’ rights by conducting any further hearings, or entry of any additional orders or judgments,
and enjoining the execution of any judgment.
2. Grant trial by jury.
3. Award compensatory damages against each Defendant.
4. Award punitive damages against each Defendant.
5. Enter a declaratory judgment declaring that the Defendants’ actions violated the
Plaintiffs’ First, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
6. Award the Plaintiff s reasonable attorney fees and costs.
7. Grant such further additional relief to the Plaintiff as the Court deems just.
Under penalties of perjury, I declare that I have read the foregoing Complaint and that the facts statedin it are true.
/s/ Kennan G. DandarKennan G. Dandar, Esq
I HEREBY CERTIFY that on November 22, 2012, I electronically filed the foregoing with theClerk of the Court by using the CM/ECF system which will send a notice of electronic filing to thecounsel of record.
/s/ Kennan G. Dandar, Esq.KENNAN G. DANDAR, ESQ.Florida Bar No. 289698Post Office Box 24597Tampa, Florida 33623-4597813-289-3858/Fax: 813-287-0895Attorney for [email protected] (Email)[email protected] (Court Desig.)[email protected] (2d Desig.)
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