In an act of protest, art, or maybe simply a hilarious prank, a shirtless man wearing a Vladimir Putin mask placed roughly 130 dildos on the Wall Street's Charging Bull statue in New York City.
Jeff Jetton, the owner of a Washington, D.C. ramen shop, is claiming he is responsible for the genius (and hilarious) act. But in May of last year, The Daily Beast wrote an entire piece on the man, calling him a "hidden hand in the Trump-Russa Drama."
In fact, The Daily Beast reports that "he’s interviewed Carter Page and tracked down many figures in the Trump-Russia orbit."
While many have interpreted the pranks as a commentary on how Putin seems to be controlling the United States, Jetton told Gay Star News "I am open to each person’s interpretation."
Jetton continued: "And [I] hope this creates more awareness of the Kremlin’s homophobic policies and treatment of the LGBT community in Russia."
The police have since contacted Jetton.
"I think it’s for a non-criminal code violation," he told HuffPost. "The officers were kind of laughing when they cited me."
In good spirits, he joked about being invited to the 1st precinct on Monday.
"I assume that’s some kind of award?" he tweeted.

























































Adam Schiff (L), Letitia James (C), and James Comey (R) — all political opponents of Trump indicted or investigated on dubious accusations.Sheila Fitzgerald/Shuttershock.com; lev radin/Shuttershock.com; mark reinstein/Shuttershock.com








PFLAG National CEO Brian K. Bond and Edith Guffey, chair of the PFLAG National board of directors.Paul Morigi/Getty Images for PFLAG National
Former Massachusetts U.S. Rep. Barney Frank addressing a crowd at a PFLAG event.Paul Morigi/Getty Images for PFLAG National
U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters talks about her relationship with former U.S. Rep. Barney Frank.Paul Morigi/Getty Images for PFLAG National
U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters accepting a PFLAG award.Paul Morigi/Getty Images for PFLAG National
Former Rep. Barney Frank and Kathleen Sengstock.Paul Morigi/Getty Images for PFLAG National
Rep. Maxine Waters and PFLAG National CEO Brian K. Bond.Paul Morigi/Getty Images for PFLAG National

L-R: Jim McGreevey, Jolanda Jones, Erica DeusoJamie McCarthy/Getty Images; Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images; ericadeuso.com





