Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Secret Service probes bullet-ridden Obama image on Facebook

    PHOENIX (Reuters) - The U.S. Secret Service is investigating the origins of a photo on an Arizona police officer's Facebook page that shows a group of armed youths posing in the desert with what appears to be a bullet-ridden image of President Barack Obama on a T-shirt.

    Max Milien, a Secret Service spokesman, said on Friday that the agency was looking into the picture taken of seven youths, four of them toting guns, that turned up on the Facebook page of Sergeant Pat Shearer of the Peoria, Arizona, police department.

    "Any time information is brought to our attention where an individual or a group of individuals expresses unusual direction of interest in one of our protectees, we conduct appropriate follow-up," said Milien.

    He said individuals have a right of freedom of speech, but "we certainly have the right and duty to speak to individuals to determine what their intent is."

    The Peoria police also said they were conducting an internal inquiry into whether the officer's actions violated any department policy. Peoria is a suburb west of Phoenix.

    The department was informed of the situation by the Secret Service early on Thursday afternoon, a spokesman said.

    The photo, which was shown on local TV with the youths' faces blanked out, has since been removed from Shearer's Facebook page.

    In an interview with a local television station, Shearer said the picture was taken by him, and he did not feel it was "that big of a deal." He called it a "political statement."

    He told the station he stands by Obama and would give up his life for him.

    "It's not like they (the youths) were going to go out and shoot the president," Shearer said.

    The 25-year veteran officer has not been placed on administrative leave, Peoria police spokesman Jay Davies said.

    He could face a range of disciplinary action if found to be in violation of department's policy governing use of social and electronic media.

    That police states: "Employees shall not post, transmit, reproduce, and/or disseminate information (text, pictures, video, audio, etc.) to the Internet or any other forum (public or private) that would tend to discredit or reflect unfavorably upon the department or any of the department's employees."

    Davies declined to discuss specific details of the department's investigation.

    Danielle Airey, a Peoria Unified School District spokeswoman, confirmed that one of the youths in the picture is a district high school student but did not know about the others.

    She declined comment on whether any action has been taken against the student.

    "Our first step really is working with authorities as they conduct their investigations," she said.

    (Additional reporting in Washington by Ian Simpson; Editing by Steve Gorman and Paul Thomasch)

    What do you feel about this article?

     
    • Doc  •  29 days ago
      No one loves facebook more than cops and lawyers and now apparently, the government. Keep posting your deep dark secrets, people.
    • Michigan Guy  •  San Antonio, United States  •  29 days ago
      As I have said in many comments. Be careful of what you post anywhere on the net. Homeland Security, Secret Service, NASA, FBI and the CIA have people that their only job is to watch for derogatory and violent comments against our government and politicians on the net. Two years ago there was a man in Marquette Michigan who posted a violent act against President Obama on the net. The next thing he knew was he was doing 5 years in the Federal Penitentiary.
    • Drunken Sailor  •  29 days ago
      I know the Secret Service is required to investigate these types of things, but does the Secret Service's public liaison have to notify the news wires every time an idiot exercises his or her first amendment rights?
    • William  •  Jersey City, United States  •  29 days ago
      In 2006, New York State Comptroller Alan Hevesi, a Democrat, said that then-US President George W. Bush should get a “bullet between his eyes”. Hevesi eventually gave a half-hearted apology for his remark, but he was never investigated for the threat.
    • Jen  •  29 days ago
      These people better watch it, under the new law the National Defense Authorization Act, these kids and that cop could be seen as terrorists, thrown into an unknown jail..and never heard of again. WATCH OUT
    • Doc  •  29 days ago
      LOL, Facebook fulfills an extraordinary role as an intelligence test for its users.
    • yahoo user  •  29 days ago
      so, is it against the law to shoot a picture of someone we don't like? Is it against the law to post a shot up picture of someone?
    • Old Soldier  •  Atlanta, United States  •  28 days ago
      There are no telling how many targets there are out there with Obamas face on them, that
      no one knows about, because those guys have better sense to post them on anything!
    • wettwilly  •  Newhall, United States  •  29 days ago
      Obama t-shirts everywhere are shaking on their hangers
    • old11Bravo  •  Las Cruces, United States  •  28 days ago
      I did the same thing when Carter was prez, but I didn't go shoot him, did I? Shooting an EMBLEM does not make you an assassin, it just makes a political statement. That said, dimwits of all parties are posting all kinds of things on the net they should know better than to post.
    • Big Leo  •  Gila Bend, United States  •  28 days ago
      Hypocrisy on the half shell, or by half wits-- all of you gloated for eight years over the deadly threats and death images of Bush-- all of you. Now, you're offended by one report of a similar act against Obama. Admit it. You called it political speech, or artistic expression, or whatever, and you laughed. I'm against this type of behavior and you are not. Pure, unadulterated, stupid hypocrisy . . .
    • Barney  •  Fort Worth, United States  •  29 days ago
      Wonder if they ever investigated all those Bush effigies hung by protesters during the G-20 meetings?
    • yahooblows  •  29 days ago
      Burning visages of GW, calling for his murder and actively participating in mock lynchings was just fine, but shoot at a picture of Obama in the desert and it's suddenly something to worry about.
    • Joe  •  Manila, Philippines  •  29 days ago
      I cannot give my opinion on this event, the Secret Service will not allow me to.
    • jamesh  •  Kansas City, United States  •  29 days ago
      didn't alec baldwin want to stone henry hyde to death?
    • ScottH  •  Tacoma, United States  •  27 days ago
      Bush okay. Obama, we'll get you!! Why the double stand. Oh yea.........
    • jason  •  Barnardsville, United States  •  27 days ago
      Nobody in thier right mind would risk putting Bidden in charge.
    • Willy  •  29 days ago
      didn't he know that the cia owns face book???
    • Thomas.  •  Middletown, United States  •  29 days ago
      I wonder if the Secret Service ever investigated the firm which produced the movie "Death of a President" where the assassination of GW Bush was made into a movie while the man was still in office.
    • todumbtocount  •  29 days ago
      What a waste of resources. No one wants the dork dead because then we would be stuck with Joe Biden as President.
    [ [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], '27013743', '0' ], [ [['keyword', 9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]

    News for You

    • American officers killed in Afghan Interior Ministry
      American officers killed in Afghan Interior Ministry

      KABUL (Reuters) - Two American officers were shot dead at close range in Afghanistan's Interior Ministry on Saturday, a U.S. official said, as rage gripped the country for a fifth day over the burning of the Muslim holy book at a NATO base. NATO recalled all staff working at ministries in the Afghan capital, Kabul, following the attack, with its top commander in Afghanistan calling the killer a coward. ...

    • Seven Americans wounded in attack on NATO base in Afghanistan

      KUNDUZ, Afghanistan (Reuters) - Seven U.S. military trainers were wounded on Sunday when protesters in Kunduz in northern Afghanistan threw a grenade at their base, provincial police chief Samihullah Qatra told reporters. NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) confirmed there had been an explosion outside one of its bases in northern Afghanistan, but declined to comment on casualties. (Reporting by Fraidoon Elhaam in Kunduz, Amie Ferris-Rotman in Kabul; Editing by Michael Georgy)

    • "Bad" cocaine killed American TV producer in Uganda

      KAMPALA (Reuters) - An American television producer found dead on a hotel balcony in Uganda last week died after taking contaminated cocaine, police and a private investigator said on Saturday. An official toxicology report confirmed the narcotic was in Jeff Rice's blood, dispelling initial suspicions the father-of-two known for his work on the U.S. show "The Amazing Race," had been poisoned by attackers. Rice, who was found slumped over a table bleeding through the nose and mouth, died of asphyxiation, …

    • Afghan ministry worker suspected in killing of U.S. officers
      Afghan ministry worker suspected in killing of U.S. officers

      KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan's interior ministry said on Sunday one of its employees is suspected of shooting dead two U.S. officers inside its headquarters a day earlier, an attack that prompted NATO to recall all its staff from ministries. "An employee has been identified as a suspect and he has now fled. The interior ministry is trying to arrest the suspected individual," it said in a statement. Afghan security sources identified Abdul Saboor, a 25-year-old police intelligence officer, as a suspect …

    • Exclusive: Saudi oil boost could calm markets: Senator Schumer
      Exclusive: Saudi oil boost could calm markets: Senator Schumer

      WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States should do more to encourage Saudi Arabia to boost its oil production to make up for lost Iranian oil, Senator Charles Schumer said on Sunday, urging renewed diplomacy as a way to ease the run-up in oil prices. Tensions surrounding Iran's nuclear program have pushed oil prices to nine-month highs, and U.S. gasoline prices have surged, becoming a top political issue in the run-up to the 2012 presidential elections. ...

    • Afghan policeman suspect in killing of U.S. officers: sources
      Afghan policeman suspect in killing of U.S. officers: sources

      KABUL (Reuters) - Afghan authorities said on Sunday they believe an Afghan police intelligence officer may have been involved in the shooting deaths of two U.S. officers inside the interior ministry a day earlier, prompting NATO to recall all its staff from ministries. Abdul Saboor, 25, is the main suspect in the killing, which took place at close range well inside the heavily fortified ministry in the centre of the capital, Kabul, senior security sources told Reuters on condition of anonymity. "Abdul …

    • Israel raids south Gaza after rocket attacks
      Israel raids south Gaza after rocket attacks

      Israeli warplanes early Sunday carried out an attack on the south of the Gaza Strip after rockets were fired at Israel, according to the army.

    Search