This Mexican boy took a photograph of Sarah Connor on November 10, 1984 and sold it to her for $4. He felt guilty doing so, but his father would beat him if he did not. Sarah later gave the snapshot to her son John Connor, who carried it with him in his wallet in a plastic sleeve. John would carry it with him for 30 years before giving it to one of his suborinates, Sergeant Kyle Reese. He yelled in Spanish, "Look! Look! There's a storm coming!", which Sarah ominously said "I know."
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| - This Mexican boy took a photograph of Sarah Connor on November 10, 1984 and sold it to her for $4. He felt guilty doing so, but his father would beat him if he did not. Sarah later gave the snapshot to her son John Connor, who carried it with him in his wallet in a plastic sleeve. John would carry it with him for 30 years before giving it to one of his suborinates, Sergeant Kyle Reese. He yelled in Spanish, "Look! Look! There's a storm coming!", which Sarah ominously said "I know."
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| - This Mexican boy took a photograph of Sarah Connor on November 10, 1984 and sold it to her for $4. He felt guilty doing so, but his father would beat him if he did not. Sarah later gave the snapshot to her son John Connor, who carried it with him in his wallet in a plastic sleeve. John would carry it with him for 30 years before giving it to one of his suborinates, Sergeant Kyle Reese. He yelled in Spanish, "Look! Look! There's a storm coming!", which Sarah ominously said "I know."
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