Feds checking our myspace

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May 16, 2002
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#1
This is crazy.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2006/10/13/state/n173002D95.DTL

10-13) 17:30 PDT SACRAMENTO, (AP) --

Upset by the war in Iraq, Julia Wilson vented her frustrations with President Bush last spring on her MySpace.com page.

She posted a picture of the president, scrawled "Kill Bush" across the top and drew a dagger stabbing his outstretched hand. She replaced the page last spring after learning in her eighth-grade history class that such threats are a federal offense.

Too late.

Federal authorities had found the page and placed her on their checklist. They finally reached her this week in her molecular biology class.

The 14-year-old freshman at Sacramento's McClatchy High School was taken out of class Wednesday and questioned for about 15 minutes by two Secret Service agents. The incident has upset her parents, who said the agents should have included them when they questioned their daughter.

On Friday, the teenager said the agents' questioning over her page on the popular teenage Internet gathering spot led her to tears.

"I wasn't dangerous. I mean, look at what's (stenciled) on my backpack — it's a heart. I'm a very peace-loving person," said Wilson, an honor student who describes herself as politically passionate. "I'm against the war in Iraq. I'm not going to kill the president."

Her mother, Kirstie Wilson, said two agents showed up at the family's home in the city's upscale Land Park neighborhood Wednesday afternoon, questioned her and promised to return once her daughter was home from school.

After they left, Kirstie Wilson sent a text message to her daughter's cell phone, telling her to come straight home: "there are two men from the secret service that want to talk with you. Apparently you made some death threats against president bush," the message read.

"Are you serious!?!? omg. Am I in a lot of trouble?" her daughter wrote back, using shorthand for "Oh, my God."

Moments later, Kirstie Wilson received another text message from her daughter saying agents had pulled her out of class.

Julia Wilson said the agents threatened her by saying she could be sent to juvenile hall for making the threat.

"They yelled at me a lot," she said. "They were unnecessarily mean."

Julia and her parents said the agents were justified in questioning her over her MySpace.com posting. But they said they believe agents went too far by not waiting until she was out of school and questioning her without a parent present.

They also said the agents should have more quickly figured out they weren't dealing with a real danger. Ultimately, the agents told the teenager they would delete her investigation file.

"She obviously is not a threat to society, if you look at her age, her family background, the cartoonish nature of the MySpace page," said her father, Jim Moose, an environmental law attorney.

"She is just a typical teenage girl who made a mistake," said her mother during an interview at their neatly landscaped home. "My blood is boiling that they went behind my back."

Assistant Principal Paul Belluomini said the agents gave him the impression the girl's mother knew they were planning to question her daughter at school. There is no legal requirement that parents be notified.

"This has been an ongoing problem," said Ann Brick, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union in San Francisco.

Former governors Pete Wilson and Gray Davis vetoed bills that would have required that parents give consent or be present when their children are questioned at school by law enforcement officers. A similar bill this year cleared the state Senate but died in the Assembly.

Spokesmen for the Secret Service in Sacramento and Washington, D.C., said they could not comment.

McClatchy senior Ted Prickett went out of his way to shake Julia Wilson's hand Friday outside the high school.

"I may be against her for what she said about Bush, but she stood up for free speech," Prickett said.

Julia Wilson is planning to post a new MySpace.com page, this one devoted to organizing other students to protest the Iraq war.

"I decided today I think I will because it (the questioning) went too far," she said.
 
May 5, 2002
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#2
no surprise. When I was in the works to roll to Egypt and was posting about it, they were checking my page every once in a while, well it was the Department of Homeland Security. It didnt help that i would post up shit talking about the iraq war. we'll see if i get hassled @ the airport when i go overseas next month.. i hope not
 
Feb 23, 2006
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#15
out of 98765341324455637894764 million people that have a myspace....and juss randomly ran into the young girl's page

how?? LOL

FUCK BUSH...THE ONLY BUSH I LIKE.....IS A SHAVEN ONE!!!