|      Authorities    and celebrities were grappling Monday with how to respond to a website that    posted what appears to be private financial information    about top government officials and stars such    as Jay-Z and Mel Gibson. Los    Angeles police    said they were investigating how the Social Security    number, address and a credit report of    the police chief ended up on the site. The site also posted the same    information about FBI Director Robert Mueller; the bureau said it was aware    of the site but declined to say whether it was investigating. The site also targeted    stars such as Beyonce, Ashton Kutcher, Kim Kardashian and Paris Hilton.    Info posted about Vice President Joe Biden and    former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton did not include credit reports but    included addresses and other sensitive information. Social Security numbers    posted on Gibson, Jay-Z and others matched records in public databases. The site, which bears an    Internet suffix originally assigned to the Soviet Union, expanded throughout    the day Monday to add entries on Britney Spears, former vice presidential    candidate Sarah Palin and others. It did not state how the    information was obtained or why the 11 people targeted on the site were    selected, describing the records only as "secret files." A Twitter    profile linked to the site and created after its existence was first reported    by celebrity website TMZ included an anti-police message in Russian. Several of the purported    credit reports appear to have been generated last week. Representatives for each    person targeted either declined to comment on the accuracy of the information    that was posted, or they did not return messages seeking comment. Los Angeles police Cmdr.    Andrew Smith said the LAPD was investigating the posting of Beck's information    and would also investigate the posting of info on any celebrities who live in    the city. He said confidential    information on top police officials has been posted online at least twice    before. "People get mad at    us, go on the Internet and try to find information about us, and post it all    on one site," Smith said. "The best word I can    use to describe it is creepy," he said about the practice known as    doxxing. "It's a creepy thing to do." Frank Preciado, assistant    officer in charge at the LAPD online section, said the postings are also    illegal. He said the information was likely taken from what is supposed to be    a secure database of city employees. Several of the pages    featured unflattering pictures of the celebrities or government officials    whose information was posted. The site's page on Beck    includes a taunting reference to former officer Christopher Dorner, who    apparently committed suicide after he killed four people during a multi-day    rampage. Beck's page included the message    "(hash)YouCantCornerTheDorner" and an image of a woman protesting    police corruption. While government    officials often have to disclose details on their finances — and celebrity    divorces sometimes feature public financial data — the information posted    online exceeds those disclosures. Social Security numbers    are rarely included in public records anymore because they can be used for    identity theft.  |    
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