• WFP Live
  • WFP Stuff
  • WFP Celebrations
  • Passages
  • Mike on Crime

Mike on Crime

Mike on Crime
  • Articles |
  • Blog |
  • Crime Stoppers Video |
  • Books |
  • Contact |
  • Mailing List

Winnipeg Free Press

Mike

Email Mike

MIKE’S BLOG

ON WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM

  • 2011 Hawaiian Cruise
  • Crime Stoppers - Submit a Tip

JOIN

THE MIKE ON CRIME

MAILING LIST

CRIME AND PUNISHMENT

Syndicated National Radio Show with Mike McIntyre

NEW TIME

SUNDAYS 7 pm - 9 pm CST

Listen Live on cjob.com

BROWSE ARTICLES

Ask the Judge
Cold Cases
Crime and Punishment Radio Show
International Crime News
Manitoba Crime News
Mike in Books
Mike In The Community
Mike’s Bio
Mike’s Favourites
National Crime News
The Lighter Side of the Law
Voice of the Victims
Winnipeg’s Hot Cars of the Day

LINKS

  1. Mike McIntyre on TWITTER
  2. Winnipeg Free Press
  3. What If Sports Fantasy Leagues
  4. Jason van Rassel: Crime Reporter
  5. THE DOE NETWORK
  6. Peter Warren
  7. Charles Adler
  8. Amazon.ca - "To The Grave"
  9. The Smoking Gun
  10. Bouck's Law Blog
  11. Canadian Missing Adults
  12. Full Comment - National Post Blogs
  13. Great Plains Publications
  14. James Turner - The Crime Scene
  15. Manitoba Organization of Victim Assistance (MOVA)
  16. Missing Children's Society
  17. Patent and the Pantry
  18. PETITION for change to the Not Criminally Responsible legislation
  19. PrimeTimeCrime
  20. Scared Monkeys
  21. TJ's Gift Foundation
  22. Tyler Pelke
  23. Vision For Justice
  24. Winnipeg CrimeStat Program

JURY POLL

US man charged with threatening president by posting 'Sniper' poem on supremacist Web site

DATE: Feb 19, 04:43 PM

By Brett Barrouquere, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – A man has been charged with posting a poem threatening President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama on a white supremacist Web site.

U.S. Secret Service Special Agent Stephan M. Pazenzia said Johnny Logan Spencer Jr., 27, of Louisville, wrote and posted the poem, titled “The Sniper,” on a page called NewSaxon.org. The site is described as an “Online Community for Whites by Whites.” The poem was posted in August 2007, according to an arrest affidavit.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Dave Whalin on Friday ordered Spencer released on $25,000 bond, but kept under house arrest at a family member’s home. He’s charged with making threats against the president and threatening to kill or injure a major candidate for the office of the president.

The poem describes a gunman shooting and killing a “tyrant” later identified as the president, setting off panic in the wake of the fatal shot being fired.

“The bullet that he has chambered is one of the purest pride, And the inspiration on the casing reads DIE negro DIE,” the poem states.

Spencer used the online moniker “Pain1488,” a reference to a phrase used by white nationalists as well as an homage to Adolf Hitler.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Phillip Chance told Whalin that, even though investigators linked no weapons to Spencer, the poem doesn’t qualify as protected political speech.

“This is a threat by an individual against an individual simply because of who he is,” Chance said. “He is the president and he is black.”

Federal public defender Laura Wyrosdick said no one took action to harm Obama in the two years the poem has been publicly available.

“We’re here today because Mr. Spencer allegedly wrote a poem, a work of art,” Wyrosdick said.

After the hearing, Spencer’s cousin, Paula McGill of Louisville, said family members were shocked by Spencer’s arrest.

“I don’t think he thought it was going to catch up with him,” McGill said. “He’s not a harmful guy at all.”

The Secret Service became aware of the poem just after the 2008 election that made Obama the first black president in U.S. history. An arrest affidavit says the Secret Service identified Spencer as the author, but never tracked him down and only referenced the writing in a report on the white supremacist National Socialist movement.

The affidavit does not say why the Secret Service made no effort to arrest Spencer for more than 15 months. The investigation didn’t start until a week ago, when an informant faxed a copy of the writings to the FBI, Pazenzia said.

Spencer is currently on probation from a state drug conviction in Louisville.

If convicted of the new charges, he could face up to 15 years in prison.

© 2007 Winnipeg Free Press. All Rights Reserved.
The Winnipeg Free Press is a member of the Manitoba Press Council.