Killer Stories with Harvey Guillén - Million-Dollar Jackpots: How Uncle Jerry Rigged McDonald’s Monopoly Game

Episode Date: May 11, 2026

When McDonald’s ran its beloved 1990s Monopoly sweepstakes, Jerome "Uncle Jerry" Jacobson had one job: Protect the game pieces. Instead, he used his position as Head of Security to rig the game. For... years. To the tune of over $24 million in cash and prizes. Sources for this episode include:"How an Ex-Cop Rigged McDonald’s Monopoly Game and Stole Millions." by Jeff Maysh The Daily Beast, July 29, 2018. Keep up with Killer Stories! Instagram: @killerstoriespodTikTok: @killerstoriespodX: @killerstorieshq Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:03 There is a specific kind of madness called gambler's fallacy. We tell ourselves that luck is a debt that the universe eventually has to pay back. The more we lose, the more do we are for a win. And corporations know this. They weaponize it. They call it a sweepstakes. For 12 years, McDonald's ran the most successful marketing campaign in history. The Monopoly game.
Starting point is 00:00:37 The game Monopoly has come to life at McDonald's. We'll make DLT, Coca-Cola, or a million dollars. We all remember it. The peel-off sticker on the French fry box, the desperate hunt for boardwalk and park plays, the promise that if you just ate one more Big Mac, you could win a million dollars. We bought the lie because we assumed
Starting point is 00:01:05 the pieces were random. Well, we were wrong. The winning pieces weren't distributed by chance. They weren't scattered across the country. No, they were in one man's pocket. From 1989 to 2001, there were almost no legitimate top prize winners of the McDonald's Monopoly game.
Starting point is 00:01:27 The entire system was hijacked by one man. An unassuming ex-cop named Jerome Jacobson. He was the head of security, hired to protect the integrity of the game. And instead, he stole it. I'm Harvey Guillen, and this is Killer Stories. Let's head back to the 80s. It's a decade of excess and ambition. The stock market is breaking records, and the malls are packed.
Starting point is 00:02:22 And the Greed is Good era is in full swing. People don't just want to buy things. They want to win them. And in the middle of it all is McDonald's. In 1987, McDonald's is looking for a way to boost sales. They hire an external marketing firm called Simon Marketing. And Simon Marketing comes up with an idea so simple, it's dangerous.
Starting point is 00:02:48 Monopoly. The game is a massive scavenger. hunt built on top of the McDonald's menu. When you buy a large fry or a soda, there are two small stickers attached to the side. You peel them back to find properties from the Monopoly board. Most of them are instant wins for a free burger or a Coke, but the real money is in the collect-to-win sets. To win the million-dollar jackpot, you had to find the rare blue pieces, park place and boardwalk. McDonald's prints millions of park places,
Starting point is 00:03:26 but they only release one or two boardwalks for the entire country. Suddenly every meal turns into a lottery ticket, making you feel like you were always just one lucky frybox away from never having to work again. It taps into something primal, the desire to collect,
Starting point is 00:03:49 and to complete a set. When the game launches, it causes a frenzy. People dumpster die for discarded fry boxes. They trade pieces on early internet forums, and they buy extra hash browns just for the sticker. Because nothing says I'm an adult making sound financial decisions, like eating four orders of deep-fried potatoes for the one-in-a-million chance to win a jet ski.
Starting point is 00:04:15 So go directly to McDonald's. But hurry, game pieces are all. Almost gone. It increases McDonald's sales by 40%. It's a license to print money. But printing money requires security. After all, a single slip of paper could be worth $1 million. So, McDonald's and Simon Marketing don't take any chances.
Starting point is 00:04:44 They treat these stickers like nuclear launch codes. They hire Dittler Brothers, a legendary printing firm in Oakwood, Georgia. These guys don't just print coupons. They print postage stamps and lottery tickets, meaning they knew something about producing valuable commodities at volume. At Dittler Brothers, the floor hums with the sound of Heidelberg web presses running 50,000 sheets per hour. And the pieces themselves, they're coated in a special scratch-off latex that is chemically. designed to disintegrate if you try to lift it with the solvent.
Starting point is 00:05:22 The factory is practically a fortress. To get to the printing floor, you have to pass through a metal detector. You also need a key card and a clearance code. The employees who run the presses are search. The trash is searched. And for the high value pieces, the million-dollar winners, the security is even tighter. These pieces aren't printed on the main
Starting point is 00:05:47 No, they are printed in a sealed room, a vault, within a vault. The process is designed to be tamper-proof. Two executives from Simon Marketing have to be present at all times during the printing. Once the pieces are printed and inspected, they're immediately locked in a titanium briefcase. From there, they are transported by an armor car to the packaging factories, where they They will be randomly inserted into fry boxes and soda cups. The chain of custody, chef's kiss. It's perfect.
Starting point is 00:06:24 It's unbreakable. Until it isn't. Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive. The Price is Right Fortune Pick. BetMDM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly. 19 plus to wager. Ontario only. Please play responsibly.
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Starting point is 00:07:28 This spring, denim gets a softer, lighter update. Introducing Old Navy's drapey denim wide leg, a new fit that moves with you. It's everything you want denim to feel like for summer. Easy, breathable, and effortlessly cool. With a fit that creates natural movement and a wide leg that feels modern, not overwhelming. Plus, that signature, wait, for this price? Moment. Old Navy's drapeed denim wide leg. The problem with building a fortress is you eventually have to give someone the keys. Enter Jerome Jacobson. Eventually, he'll be known as Uncle Jerry, and it's not a term of endearment, and no, not related to the ice cream family.
Starting point is 00:08:13 But for now, let's call him Jerry. Jerry is the head of security for Simon Marketing. It's his job to oversee the entire production of... of the Monopoly game. Jerry used to be a Hollywood, Florida, police officer, and he'd been a good one. But in 1980, his body betrayed him. He developed a rare neurological disorder
Starting point is 00:08:36 that caused his wrists to seize up. He lost his grip strength and was medically retired. So in 1981, when Jerry gets the job at Simon Marketing, he treats it like his redemption. Jerry is the perfect. perfect employee. From 1981 to 1987, he is the guy you want on your payroll. He's meticulous. He is the kind of guy who stays late to check the locks three times. So in 1987, when McDonald's launches monopoly, Jerry is the obvious choice. He's promoted to oversee the entire security operation.
Starting point is 00:09:20 He isn't just guarding the game. He's the one. who designs the unbreakable chain of custody. Two years in, Jerry walks the floor of Dittler Brothers with Iskowl. He personally inspects the trash cans for loose stickers. He even weighs the waistbacks to make sure no paper is missing. Jerry is the perfect watchman. But he has a secret. Jerry has become resentful.
Starting point is 00:09:54 He is the man who has spent his life protecting other people's money. He watches the executives at McDonald's buying yachts. He sees the executives at Simon Marketing flying first class. He looks at the pieces of paper coming off the presses, pieces of paper that are worth more than he will make in 20 years. and he starts to ask a dangerous question. Why not me? I'm not sure what he expected. A yacht? Jerry, come on, really?
Starting point is 00:10:30 You're guarding stickers for a living. But that's the thing about resentment. It makes you think you deserve a helipat just for showing up to work on time. Unfortunately, the system relies on one fatal assumption that the head of security is incorruptible. Because of his rent, Jerry is the only person allowed to be alone with the high value pieces. When the million-dollar stickers are printed, Jerry is the one who takes them from the press. He is the one who puts them in the briefcase.
Starting point is 00:11:01 He is the one who locks the seal. He realizes that the chain of custody has a link that nobody is watching. Him. In 1989, Jerry decides to test the system. He doesn't need a gun or a team of hackers, just a vest. It is a standard issue security vest, the kind you wear to look official. But Jerry makes a modification. He takes his vest home and gets out his sewing machine.
Starting point is 00:11:35 He carefully stitches a secret pocket on the inside lining. The next day, he walks into the sealed room at Dittler Brothers. The presses are running, the noise is deafening, the other executives are watching the machines, and then, with a slight of hand that would make a magician jealous, he slips a piece inside his vest. He walks out of the sealed room, past the guard, and the metal detectors,
Starting point is 00:12:07 and just like the man hired to protect the treasure, just walked out with it, It started as a test. Can the system be beaten? The answer was yes. And Jerry liked that answer a little too much. Staples Preferred Business Membership, built for busy business owners, because you've got bigger things to think about.
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Starting point is 00:13:04 There is a fundamental rule in economics. A product is only worth what you can sell it for. A stolen painting is worthless if you can't find a buyer. A stolen diamond is dangerous if you can't fence it. And a stolen McDonald's monopoly piece? That might be the most dangerous object of all. Because, unlike a diamond, you can't just sell it to a pawn shop, you have to give it back to the victim. To get the money, you have to walk into McDonald's corporate headquarters, hand them the sticker, and say, look, ha-ha, how lucky am I, right?
Starting point is 00:13:43 Jerry knows this. He knows that the head of security can't win a prize. the game will be over before the check is cleared. He needs a proxy. So he starts small. Jerry steals a waterworks game piece worth $25,000. He gives it to his stepbrother, Marvin Braun, in a Florida parking lot with the expectation of a kickback.
Starting point is 00:14:09 Jerry would later tell investigators, I don't know if I just wanted to show Marvin I could do something or if I was just bragging. Together, they concoct a story. Marvin found the piece. Marvin claims a prize, and Jerry waits. He watches the internal memos at Simon Marketing. He waits for the alarms to ring.
Starting point is 00:14:35 He waits for the auditors to notice that the winning piece never actually shipped to a factory. But the alarms never ring. McDonald's cuts the check. Marvin caches it, and he hence Jerry, a thick envelope of cash in return. The system has a blind spot. The corporation is so focused on preventing outside theft,
Starting point is 00:15:02 people printing fake stickers or hacking the database that they never built a defense against the man holding the keys. Once Jerry knows the system is broken, though one-time thing, becomes a habit. And then the habit becomes a routine. Let's look at the mechanics of the theft.
Starting point is 00:15:28 Because this is where the genius lies, really. Remember the vest? Well, that was just the transport. And the protocol states that an independent auditor is supposed to accompany Jerry everywhere. Unfortunately, humans have needs. Specifically, humans need to use the bathroom. But men's room etiquette is a powerful thing.
Starting point is 00:15:49 When Jerry goes into the stall, the auditor waits outside, like a gentleman. Jerry walks into the stall with the sealed envelope of winning pieces. He locks the door. The envelope is sealed with void pattern holographic tape. If he pulls it, the word void will appear on the plastic. It is supposed to be impossible to open without leaving a scar. But Jerry knows the chemistry. He doesn't pull.
Starting point is 00:16:18 He uses a surgical scalpel to lift the adhesive from the bottom corner, bypassing the chemical trigger entirely. He waits for someone in the next stall to flush. And under the cover of that noise, rip. He swaps the million-dollar boardwalk for a worthless Baltic Avenue. He smooths the tape back down. The surgery takes 11 seconds. He flushes the toilet, he washes his hand because he's a gentleman,
Starting point is 00:16:57 and he walks back out to the auditor, carrying an envelope that is now filled with garbage, while the million dollar ticket sits warm against his chest. It's the perfect swap. The factory will receive the envelope. They will distribute the pieces and millions of customers will buy fries, hunting for a prize
Starting point is 00:17:26 that is already sitting in a drawer in Georgia. For six years, Jerry operates like a sniper. He steals selectively. He distributes the pieces to friends, family members, the local butcher. He takes a percentage of a number. of every win. He's making money, but he isn't satisfied because Jerry is a hoarder. He starts stealing pieces. He can't even cash. He steals the car pieces. He steals the vacation
Starting point is 00:17:57 pieces. He steals the video game pieces. He has a safe in his house filled with millions of dollars in potential. But he has a problem. Jerry is running out of friends. You can only have so many cousins. win the lottery before it looks suspicious. He needs a bigger network. He needs a distribution channel. He needs a partner who doesn't care about the rules. In 1995, the universe introduces Jerry Jacobson to Gennaro Colombo. They meet at the Atlanta airport.
Starting point is 00:18:37 It's a setup arranged by a mutual friend. If Jerry is the invisible man, Genaro Colombo is a new. neon sign. Janato is from New York. He claims to be in the casino marketing business. He wears expensive suits and drives flashy cars. He talks loud and is allegedly connected to the Colombo crime family.
Starting point is 00:19:02 They are opposites, the odd couple, if you will. Jerry is nervous, obsessive ex-cop. Janato is made adjacent operator. But they have one thing in common. They both believe they are smarter than the system. Jerry shows Gennaro a piece, a Dodge Viper, worth $50,000. He said, I can get these, but I can cash them. Janato looks at the sticker, looks at the nervous man in the security vest, and he smiles and
Starting point is 00:19:34 he says, I know a guy. This is when it stops being a case of employee theft and becomes part of an organized crime syndicate. This is when Jerome Jacobson becomes Uncle Jerry, and Genaro Colombo becomes the recruiter. Why Uncle Jerry? Now, you have to understand, in his real life, Jerome Jacobson was anything but a fun uncle. His co-workers at the office described him as cold, prickly, and intensely paranoid. He was the kind of guy who didn't just watch him. the clock, he made the clock feel uncomfortable. But in the criminal underworld, he was turning into a legend, and he had a code name to match.
Starting point is 00:20:24 Uncle Jerry. It was a brilliant bit of branding. When Janato and eventually other recruiters went out to find new winners, they didn't say, hey, do you want to participate in a high-level corporate racketeering scheme involving a corrupt security director? It's a one-way ticket to a confession booth. Instead, they lean in and whisper, "'A, uh, my Uncle Jerry has a lucky ticket for you.'" It made the whole thing sound like a family favor.
Starting point is 00:20:55 It felt safe. It felt cozy to them. He was just this mysterious, benevolent force, the man who could turn a regular person into a millionaire with one single phone call. Uncle Jerry. It sounds so sweet, doesn't it? Like he's going to pull a quarter, you know, out from behind your ear at Thanksgiving.
Starting point is 00:21:17 But in this case, Uncle Jerry isn't bringing over a fruit cake. He's bringing a stolen Dodge Viper. Uncle Jerry, you shouldn't have. Gennaro goes back to his world, the world of underground gambling, strip clubs, and mob associates. And he starts selling the tickets. like they are drugs. He tells people, I have a connection. Uncle Jerry.
Starting point is 00:21:45 He's the golden goose. The deal is simple. You pay cash up front for a piece. You cash it. You claim you found it on a hash brown wrapper. And you give Uncle Jerry and Gennaro a cut of the back end. Suddenly, the winners of the McDonald's Monopoly game start to look different. They aren't soft.
Starting point is 00:22:08 Walker moms from Ohio, they aren't college kids. They are guys from New Jersey with thick accents. They are women who work for Gennaro's nightclubs, you know, where there's a lot of dancing and not a lot of clothes. And they might be people who have never eaten a Big Mac in their lives. Jerry stays in the shadows. He keeps working at Simon Marketing, inspecting the factories. He keeps signing the safety protocols. but on the weekends he meets Gennaro in random parking lots.
Starting point is 00:22:40 He hands over stacks of stickers worth millions, and Gennaro hands him a duffelback filled with non-sequential bills. Three decades ago, a young woman named Angie Dodge is found brutally murdered in Idaho Falls. Police put a man behind bars. But as the years pass, doubts emerge about whether the real killer was ever caught, that's when Angie's own mother embarks on a decades-long mission to uncover the truth.
Starting point is 00:23:13 Listen to The Snare, a new series from ABC Audio. Listen now wherever you get your podcasts. There is a problem with conspiracies. They are radioactive. You can contain a secret between two people, maybe three, but the moment you start adding people, the half-life decays, the radiation, leaks. By 1996, Uncle Jerry's operation has sprawled out of control. It isn't just Jerry and
Starting point is 00:23:50 Janaro anymore. They have recruited a web of middlemen to find winners. There's Andrew Glom, an ex-convict and drug trafficker from Florida. There's a psychic in South Carolina. There are strip club owners. There are distant cousins. There are Mormons. Mormons! There's Mormons involved. The golden ticket is now a currency in the underworld. O a debt to a bookie, pay him with a customized Dodge Viper. Need to launder money? Buy a million dollar sticker for half a million cash. It'd be nice to imagine Jerry as some kind of anti-hero,
Starting point is 00:24:32 but he was in Robin Hood. He was a loan shark. Most of the winners didn't get the tickets for free. They had to buy it. And since they didn't have $50,000 in cash lying around, they had to mortgage their futures to get it. Take the case of Gloria Brown. Gloria isn't a mobster. She's a single mother living in South Carolina.
Starting point is 00:24:56 She's struggling. She needs a break. A friend of a friend tells her about a miracle and opportunity. She meets Jerry and Gennaro's recruiter at a highway rest stop. They show her the million dollar piece. They tell her it could be hers. But there is a catch. She has to pay them $40,000 up front.
Starting point is 00:25:24 Gloria doesn't have that kind of money, so she takes out a second mortgage on her house. She goes into debt to win the lottery. And then she had to learn the script. You see, you can't just walk into McDonald's and hand them a million dollar sticker. They ask questions. Which store were you at? What time was it?
Starting point is 00:25:51 What did you order? Who was the cashier? So Jerry and his crew become acting coaches. They coach Gloria Brown. They tell her to say she was at a specific McDonald's in South Carolina. They tell her to say that she was reaching for her fries while driving. They tell her to act surprise. They drive her to the store
Starting point is 00:26:14 so she can describe the layout and it works. Gloria goes on national television. She holds the giant check. She smiles for the camera. She tells the world about her lucky break. And behind the camera, the mobsters are watching.
Starting point is 00:26:33 Waiting to take their 50% cut of her checks for the rest of her life. The network grows. Jerry starts to feel invincible. He has been doing this for almost a decade. By this point, he's stolen $24 million in prizes, and nobody has noticed. And then in 1995, he sends an envelope to St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis. There is no return address, just a postmark from Dallas, Texas. Inside the envelope, you guessed it, is a McDonald's Monopoly game piece. Value, one million dollars. The hospital is stunned. The media goes wild. It's the miracle
Starting point is 00:27:32 of Memphis. Who is this anonymous saint? Who would give away a fortune to sick children? McDonald's verifies the piece. It's real. They hold oppressive. conference and celebrate the mystery donor. Back in Georgia, Uncle Jerry is watching the news. We still don't know exactly why he did it. Maybe it was guilt. Maybe he wanted to do one good thing with his stolen power. Or maybe it was just a test.
Starting point is 00:28:05 Maybe he wanted to see if he could smuggle a million dollars through the system without using a human. and mule. He proved he could. But he also proved something else. He was getting sloppy. Because you can't hide a million dollars forever. Eventually, someone gets jealous. Eventually, someone gets cut out of the deal, and eventually someone talks. The end didn't come from a brilliant detective. It didn't come from a security audit. It came from a phone call. In the year 2000, an anonymous tip comes into the FBI field office in Jacksonville, Florida.
Starting point is 00:28:56 The caller is nervous. He sounds like a man with a grudge. He says, I know about the game. He says, it's rigged. And then he drops a name. Uncle Jerry. The FBI agent on the other end of the line doesn't believe it at first. It sounds like conspiracy theory, a global corporation, a rigged lottery, a secret mastermind.
Starting point is 00:29:26 But then the agent starts to pull the records. He looks at the winners. He looks at their addresses. and at their phone numbers, and he notices a pattern. They are all related. They are all connected, and they all lead back to a single zip code in Georgia.
Starting point is 00:29:53 The game is over. But the hunt, well, the hunt, has just begun. In the summer of 2000, the FBI launches, Operation Final Answer. The name is a joke, a nod to the game show who wants to be a millionaire, but the investigation isn't a game.
Starting point is 00:30:17 25 agents are assigned to the case. They bug phones and tell suspects. They map the family trees of every winner from the last decade. And what they found is a spider web. They find that the $1 million winner from 1996 is the nephew of Jerry's butcher.
Starting point is 00:30:40 They find that the Dodge Viper winner from 1998 was the neighbor of Jerry's sister. They trace calls and money, and every single thread leads back to the nondescript brick house in Lawrenceville, Georgia, to Jerome Jacobson. But they have a problem. They know he did it.
Starting point is 00:31:06 but they can't prove he did it. Jerry is careful. He never hands the pieces directly to winners. He uses layers of middlemen. The chain of custody looks clean on paper. The FBI needs a smoking gun. They need to catch a winner in the act of lying. So they decide to make a movie.
Starting point is 00:31:33 The FBI contacts McDonald's executives. They tell them, your game is rigged. Your head of security is the thief. McDonald's is horrified. They want to shut the game down immediately, but the FBI says, no, no, no, no, no, no, you have to keep playing. They need one final massive sweepstakes to flush out the network.
Starting point is 00:31:57 So McDonald's launches the 2001 monopoly game, and the FBI is waiting. They set up a shell company. They call it Shamrock Productions. They rent a flashy office. They hire actors. They even print business cards. On the side of their production van,
Starting point is 00:32:18 they paint a slogan in bright green letters. Shamrock Productions, because you're just lucky. It's a wink at the criminals they are about to bury. When the new winners call the hotline to claim their prizes, they aren't greeted by marketing execs. They are greeted by undercover agents. The FBI travels to their houses. They set up the lights and pin on microphones
Starting point is 00:32:45 and makeup and hair. We're gonna do this interview. And then the director, FBI agent, Doug Matthews, starts the interview. He asks about the moment of discovery. He zooms in and focuses on the artery pulsing in their necks. He says, tell us, how exactly did you find the winning piece? And then he lets the silence stretch.
Starting point is 00:33:12 He watches the sweat start to bead on their upper lips. He watches them stammer and invent stories about finding the sticker on a soda cup in a store they have never visited. And he gets it all on tape. The trap snapped shut on August 22, 2001. It's a synchronized, take-es- down. In Georgia, agents kicked down the door of Jerry Jacobson's house. They find the safe,
Starting point is 00:33:44 the vests, they find the stolen pieces. Across the country, winners are arrested. The psychics, the mobsters, the strip club owners. Eight people are indicted. Then 20. Then 50. It's the biggest fraud case of the year. The Attorney General John Ashcroft holds a press conference. He announces that the FBI has dismantled a $24 million conspiracy. Breaking the law is not a game. The media goes wild. It's the perfect story. A trusted brand, a corrupt cop, a mafia network.
Starting point is 00:34:28 The trial is set to begin in September. The world is ready for the show. The trial of Jerome Jacobson began. on September 10th, 2001. It is the lead story on the evening news. Everyone is talking about this McDonald's Monopoly trial, but the next morning is September 11th. The world changes in an instant.
Starting point is 00:34:58 The towers fall. The Pentagon is hit. The illusion of safety is shattered forever. Suddenly, nobody cares of. about a rigged board game or stolen stickers. Nobody cares about Uncle Jerry. The story vanishes. It clips by a tragedy so massive
Starting point is 00:35:23 it nearly erases the crime from public memory. Most of the defendants take plea deals in the shadow of the attacks. Jerome, Uncle Jerry Jacobson, is sentenced to three years in prison and order to pay 12.5 million in restitution. He goes to jail quietly. There are no cameras, no headlines.
Starting point is 00:35:56 Jerome Jacobson was released from prison in 2005. He's a free man. He lives a quiet life in Georgia. He is in his 80s now. He's no longer Uncle Jerry. He's just another retreat. retiree, an estate full of them. And McDonald's?
Starting point is 00:36:19 I think they're doing just fine. They fired Simon Marketing. They fired Dittler Brothers. They hired a new agency. And eventually, they brought the game back. Because they know we can't help ourselves. We still want to believe that the next fry box is the big one. Depending on where you live, you can still play it today.
Starting point is 00:36:42 you can still walk into a McDonald's, buy a large fry, and peel off a sticker. You can still dream of winning huge prizes, but the innocence is gone. Here's the truth Jerry left us with. We spent 12 years thinking we were playing a game of chance. We thought if we just ate enough burgers,
Starting point is 00:37:04 the math would eventually swing our way. Well, we were wrong. It wasn't math. It was a guy in a security vest with a razor blade. So, the next time you're in a drive-through peeling that sticker off your coffee cup, look at it for a second.
Starting point is 00:37:25 You're hoping for a miracle, but you should probably just hope that the person in charge of the stickers isn't feeling resentful today. Thanks for tuning in to Killer Stories, a Spotify podcast. New episodes, release on Mondays. If you like today's story and want to learn more, we draw some of our
Starting point is 00:37:48 favorite sources in the episode description. Until next time, I'm Harvey Guillen. Stay safe out there.

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