Millennium Post

Probe into Facebook group that posted US service women’s naked photos

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WASHINGTON: The US Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service (NCIS) has launched a probe into the allegation­s after a report by a Us-based nonprofit news organisati­on uncovered a ‘secret’ Facebook group - which has several Marines as members - that posted naked pictures of US service women,

California-based The Center for Investigat­ive Reporting published a report last weekend, saying that naked pictures of the US service women were shared on a private Facebook group called ‘Marines United’ - either posted to the site itself or via links to a Google Drive folder.

The report, authored by Thomas Brennan, noted that the Facebook group consists of nearly 30,000 members and some of whom even posted comments on the images.

“The Marine Corps is deeply concerned about allegation­s regarding the derogatory online comments and sharing of salacious photograph­s in a closed website. This behaviour destroys morale, erodes trust and degrades the individual,” technology website The Verge quoted Captain Ryan E. Alvis of the Office of Marine Corps Communicat­ions as saying on Sunday.

The Facebook group, founded in 2015, was open to male members of the US Marine Corps, Navy Corpsmen and the British Royal Marines.

The group had “vast majority of the posted items were pictures of girls posts without permission, revenge porn, creepy stalker-like photos taken of girls in public, talk about rape, racist comments and just straight bullshit,” the report said.

The images posted on the group had over 2,500 comments, including those which urged the publishers to upload additional images.

Some explicit images had informatio­n that identified more than two dozen female service members by their names, ranks, duty stations, and branches. While some images were reportedly taken illicitly, others appeared to have been stolen from private accounts.

The case comes following the recruitmen­t of first female Marines to Infantry roles. The pictures began circulatin­g a month after the placement of those service women.

The investigat­ion is “in support of two individual­s affected by postings on the Marines United site”, while legal and other resources will be provided to assist other affected individual­s, the report said. At least one Marine, who shot illicit photograph­s, was discharged from active duty, while “hundreds of Marines” were being investigat­ed.

A veteran who was responsibl­e for first posting a link to photos on Google Drive was fired. Following the publicatio­n of report, Brennan, who is Marine Corps veteran, has received threats.

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