BRAINERD, Minn. – A violent comment about President Donald Trump made by a Brainerd High School student in the 2016-17 yearbook has people in the community and elsewhere asking how the comment ever made it into the publication, and the school district said it has launched an investigation.

One page of the yearbook asks students for their feelings about Trump. One of the four commenters, a sophomore identified by name and photo, had harsh words for the president.

“I would like to behead him,” the student said. “I do not like him.”

A poll graphic on the page asks “Do you like Trump?” It’s not clear how many students responded to the poll, but the “No” responses outweigh the “Yes” responses. It’s not clear what the precise margin is between the two or how the poll was conducted.

Using his Twitter account, actor Scott Baio, a Trump supporter, passed along an image of the page Friday and tagged Trump, the FBI and others. Within hours, the Brainerd High School’s Facebook page was flooded with angry comments.

Late Friday, KSTP-TV reported that it had interviewed the 15-year-old Brainerd sophomore, who said that she made the beheading remark last fall during a casual conversation with an acquaintance at school. The acquaintance asked the student what she thought about Trump, who was then the Republican presidential nominee. The student said that she did not like him. The acquaintance then asked her if that’s all she had to say. The student then joked that someone should behead him. The student said both she and the acquaintance laughed at the remark.

The student told KSTP that at no time did the acquaintance say the questions pertained to the yearbook. The student said she has received threats and that she harbors no ill will toward Trump.

Shelley Hansch heard about the yearbook page from her daughter, who attends Brainerd High School. Hansch said she was astonished when she saw the page, and couldn’t believe the district would allow the comments to be printed.

“I couldn’t believe that there were no checks and balances,” Hansch said. “Somebody approved it.”

She was one of about 40 to 50 people who gathered Friday afternoon at Mickey’s Pizza and Subs, across the street from the high school. The impromptu rally included a mix of community members and students. Some of the community members ended up in a shouting argument with a group of students who expressed support for the school district.

“I’m here to show the school district there is support for them in the community,” said Kaylo Brooks, who held a sign in support of the district. “We love our teachers, we love our educators, we care about our administrators. We have a phenomenal school district here, and I’m not going to sit on my couch and watch it be vilified by any of you.”

Someone should lose their job because of the lack of oversight, Hansch said, and someone needs to be held accountable.

“I can’t believe the entire thing was run by students,” Hansch said. “I can’t believe that it could have gone through print without it going through the proper channels.”

The situation makes the school look bad, she said. Politics don’t belong in a public school yearbook, she said.

Jake Berg, a senior, said he heard about the yearbook page on Facebook and looked at it in a friend’s yearbook. The comments were biased and shouldn’t have been in the yearbook, he said.

“I don’t believe beheading anybody and putting it in a yearbook should be in there,” Berg said. “No matter if it was Trump, (Hillary) Clinton or (Barack) Obama.”

If similar comments had been made about Obama or Clinton, the comments would have been labeled as racist or sexist, Berg said, and they would have been removed from the yearbook.

“If you would have said something like that to another student, you probably would have reaped the consequences,” he said. “And they probably would have been pretty hefty.”

Berg said he doesn’t have a problem with the school district, but he does have a problem with the comments ending up in the yearbook.

“Someone made a mistake,” he said. “I think they should have been more careful about what they put in there.”

The school district released the following statement on its website Friday afternoon: “The administration of Brainerd Public Schools has been notified that the 2016-2017 high school yearbook contains highly disrespectful statements from students about political figures, including the president of the United States. The administration was previously unaware of the students’ statements in the yearbook. The district does not support or otherwise endorse any disrespectful or politically based statements that are in the yearbook and apologizes for the statements that were included. While the district supports free speech, the disrespectful statements in the yearbook are contrary to the basic educational mission of the district and should not have been included in a school sponsored publication. The administration is currently investigating how this occurred and is reviewing the district’s processes to ensure that this type of unacceptable situation does not occur in the future. The administration deeply regrets that the existing processes for reviewing the yearbook did not result in the removal of the inappropriate statements.”

The BHS yearbook features grades 9-12 and is put together by students in a yearbook class. The yearbook adviser is Joe Wagner, who did not return calls for comment Friday. Superintendent Laine Larson said Friday she did not know what the existing editing process is for the yearbook, and the district would investigate the process.

The company that published the Brainerd High School yearbook said it’s working with the school district on its response to the controversial page.

Jeff Peterson, vice president of marketing for Jostens, said the Edina-based company has no editorial oversight over the thousands of yearbooks it produces for high schools across the country each year. He said Paul Sorensen, the sales representative working with the Brainerd School District, was sharing potential solutions with school district representatives Friday. Peterson described an incident like the one in Brainerd as rare.

Peterson said Jostens can offer full-page stickers to cover up the offending page.

It’s up to the school whether they choose to recall the yearbooks and apply the stickers, or whether they hand the stickers out to students to apply themselves, he said.

Sen. Carrie Ruud, R-Breezy Point, said by phone from St. Paul she has been inundated with calls from parents wanting to know more about the situation. It was careless for school employees to allow those comments to run in the yearbook, Ruud said. The student’s name will now be synonymous with those comments, she said.

“They should be protected, it’s pretty ridiculous,” Ruud said. “How did a teacher or adviser think that’s OK?”

Mark Johnson, assistant special agent in charge with the U.S. Secret Service field office in Minneapolis, confirmed the agency was aware of the comment and was investigating. Johnson said he could not comment on the agency’s investigative practices, but agents may come to the city where the threat originated as part of its investigation.

This report includes information from the Associated Press.