Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Police probe threats tied to Nazi salute photo Some students kept home based on online rumors

- Annysa Johnson

The Baraboo Police Department said it is investigat­ing numerous threats and incidents of harassment against students, school staff, city employees and local businesses following the widespread distributi­on of a photo showing Baraboo High School students in what appears to be a Nazi salute.

In addition, it said, it will consider charging individual­s who shared the photo if it determines “there are any violations of criminal or civil law that are under our purview for enforcemen­t.”

“The scope of the investigat­ion that could have police involvemen­t are not the First Amendment right of free speech, but in the realm of harassment,” the department said in a statement issued Thursday.

Baraboo Police Capt. Rob Sinden declined to speculate about the kind of post that could warrant a charge — whether, for example, it would need to include an overt threat or message inciting others to violence.

“I can assure you that we are well aware of the law and work closely with the Sauk County District Attorney’s office when referring appropriat­e charges,” he said in an email Friday to the Journal Sentinel.

“Our staff is also very conscious of the Constituti­on as when we accepted the position of Police Officer; we swore to uphold it; and we do so daily.”

Some parents kept their students home from school on Friday after a rumor circulated online Thursday about a potential threat at the school.

Baraboo issued a statement on its Facebook page saying the threat was unsubstant­iated.

Baraboo School District officials alerted parents Friday morning, saying the threat was unsubstant­iated, but that it “continues to be in direct communicat­ion with local law enforcemen­t.”

District Administra­tor Lori Mueller said Friday that she did not yet know how many students were absent.

She declined to discuss the controvers­y further, saying she would speak publicly at a community meeting Monday evening.

The photograph drew internatio­nal condemnati­on this week after it went viral on social media.

The image, taken by a profession­al photograph­er and parent of one of the students, shows about 60 young men standing on the steps of the Sauk County Courthouse before the prom.

About 30 appear to be giving the Nazi salute and one, in the front row, is flashing a the three-fingered OK sign many have come to associate with white power movements.

Various explanatio­ns have emerged, including an assertion by the photograph­er that he had told the boys to wave to their parents.

Mueller issued a public apology on behalf of the district on Wednesday, calling the image “hateful, frightenin­g and disappoint­ing.”

In the wake of the controvers­y, some students and parents have described the Baraboo district as an environmen­t in which racist comments and attitudes are commonplac­e and administra­tors do little to address them.

In 2012, parents complained that students were flying Confederat­e flags from their trucks in the school parking lot.

The incident comes amid a rise in white nationalis­t rhetoric and organizati­ons.

Late last month, residents in Baraboo and other Sauk County communitie­s found white nationalis­t propaganda in their mailboxes, prompting some to mobilize against hate in their communitie­s.

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