Officers Adam Gross, Adrian Rodriguez and Douglas Panameno, none of whom are undercover, have named Steven Sutcliffe, owner of killercop.com, in the lawsuit, "requesting" that the photos be removed from the website, according to the Los Angeles Times. This is the first litigation connected to the release, the newspaper reported. "The posts, the nature of the posts, they're not just intimidation," Moore said, according to the New York Post. "They're threatening, and they may constitute a crime. Moore told FOX 11, "We've invited the FBI, as well as the district attorney, and we're going to pursue people who have taken information that was released, some of it in regards that it shouldn't have been released. But they're calling right now for these acts of violence are not against individuals that are in any sense of assignments. They're just calling it out against any officer's photograph at all." Later on Chief Moore stated: "We have people who have taken the list and are now criminally, we believe, making threats against the safety of officers, calling for a bounty and awarding a bounty for individuals who would go out and kill a cop." -LAPD Chief Moore, Fox News, Published March 24, 2023 Updated March 27, 2023 https://twitter.com/FOXLA/status/1639330018873442319 LAPD Chief Michel Moore told the news outlet he supports efforts to have the photos taken down from Sutcliffe's website, adding the department was investigating whether the "solicitation for violence against officers" was criminal in nature. https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/lapd-anti-police-group-lawsuit/2023/03/27/id/1113938/