classroom assignment-send an e-mail that says, kill the president

AR182

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'Kill the president' e-mail prompts probe
Santa Rosa teacher gave assignment
Anastasia Hendrix, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, July 10, 2003
?2003 San Francisco Chronicle

A political science instructor at Santa Rosa Junior College is being investigated by the Secret Service for telling his students to compose an e- mail to an elected official that included the words "kill the president, kill the president," a school administrator said Wednesday.

Michael Ballou, a part-time lecturer who teaches an "Introduction to U.S. Government" course at the college's Petaluma campus, intended the assignment to be an "experiential exercise that would instill a sense of fear so they would have a better sense of why more people don't participate in the political process," said Doug Garrison, the vice president and executive dean of the Petaluma campus.

However, it "clearly is a violation of our board policies," said Garrison, who learned of the incident on Monday from campus police officials and immediately summoned Ballou to his office for an explanation. He said Ballou was continuing to teach his classes while the matter was under investigation by the Secret Service.

Ballou did not respond to requests for an interview.

Most of the 30 students in the class dismissed the June 25 assignment as a joke, but after it was repeated at a subsequent class, one student did send the e-mail to U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson (D-Napa Valley) on July 5.

Leslie Danz, a spokeswoman in Thompson's Washington, D.C., office said the e-mail, which said only "kill the president, kill the president," was not opened until Monday because of the holiday weekend. It was immediately forwarded to the Capitol police service, she said. It was the first time the office has encountered such a threat, Danz said.

The student was interviewed by the Secret Service, which had begun investigating the assignment after being tipped by a classmate, Garrison said.

Making a threat against the president is against the law and subject to up to five years in prison.

"Whether the intention was there or not, he created an environment where he was jeopardizing students," Garrison said.
 

AR182

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college professor says "kill the president" was just an exercise

college professor says "kill the president" was just an exercise

i would be pissed if this guy was teaching one of my kids.

POSTED: 6:54 p.m. PDT July 10, 2003

PETALUMA, Calif. - -- Political science teacher Michael Ballou said Thursday the furor over his classroom "kill the president" e-mail assignment has been "blown far out of proportion."

Ballou, who teaches Introduction to Government at Santa Rosa Junior College's Petaluma campus caught the attention of both the U.S. Secret Service and the FBI when a student told his mother about the homework assignment and she in turn called the FBI.

Another student e-mailed "kill the president, kill the president" to the office of U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson, D- Napa Valley, in Washington D.C. over the Independence Day weekend and Thompson's office contacted Capital police on Monday. Then the Secret Service got involved.


The whole idea, Ballou said, was for students to experience "the wave of fear and paranoia" many U.S. citizens have of their government, and merely typing the words "kill the president" let alone hitting the "send" button on their computer, serves as an object lesson in that fear.

Ballou said he never exhorted the students to actually send the "kill the president" e-mail and that it was a hypothetical experiment he has conducted in class for many years.

Students were instructed to type anything and at the bottom of the e-mail to include "kill the president, kill the president," Ballou said.

Nine students were interviewed by the Secret Service. Ballou said the Secret Service informed him that "the parameters were so vague that I was off the hook."

Richard Stribling, assistant to the special agent in charge of the Secret Service Office in San Francisco, said the agency does not comment on ongoing investigations but that it takes all threats to the life of the president seriously.

Stribling said it will be up to the U.S. Attorney's Office to decide if there has been a violation and if the case will be prosecuted. The Secret Service just gathers the facts, he said.

Stribling also questioned the intent of the classroom assignment.

"Was it to violate the law," he asked.

Ballou noted the e-mail did not say "kill the President," which could imply President Bush, nor did it say "kill President Bush."

In classroom discussions since the brouhaha over the late June assignment erupted on Monday, Ballou said students have said the reaction to the message making its way to the authorities proved that such fear and paranoia exists.

He said the furor has affected his cramming four months of subject matter into a six-week summer school course. The class ends in about two weeks.

College officials have not informed him of any disciplinary action so far, said Ballou, who has been an adjunct, part-time professor at the college for 12 years.

SRJC President Robert Agrella and Doug Garrison, executive dean of the Petaluma campus, also did not immediately return calls for comment.
 

dr. freeze

BIG12 KING
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what an idiot.....i also don't see any kind of connection between sending out such an e-mail and fear of the government...

like illustrating to kids how America is getting fatter by telling them to send out an e-mail that says Cheeseburger and Fries
 
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