Indecline

[3] In 2014, two core members of the group, including founder Ryen McPherson, were arrested for mailing a "preserved baby’s head, foot and other human body parts" that they had stolen from a Thai medical museum.

Advertisements for the film were also put on a graffiti magazine in 2007 called, "Spreading The Disease Issue #1" Also, according to an archived page of Indecline.com in early 2005, the DVD's were sold in limited quantities Indecline In August 2012, the group installed a billboard on Interstate 15 in Las Vegas with Dying for Work in black lettering on a white background and a dummy hanging from it by a noose; a companion billboard, also with a hanged man, read "Hope you're happy Wall St."[1][5] In April 2015, eight people spent six days creating a piece of illegal graffiti, claimed to be the largest in the world: "This land was our land", painted on a disused military runway in the Mojave Desert (35°16′50″N 117°23′52″W / 35.280664°N 117.397822°W / 35.280664; -117.397822).

[7][8] On August 18, 2016, using industrial epoxy, the group glued life-sized nude statues of Trump to the sidewalk in five cities: Cleveland, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, and Seattle.

Union Pacific Railroad Police has placed a $300.000 bounty on Indecline for vandalism and has moved some of the engines stored at Lund to Warm Springs Yard in Salt Lake City, Utah.

In response, Indecline installed eight effigies of hanging clowns dressed as members of the Ku Klux Klan in Richmond's Bryan Park.