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The group of residents from Lincoln Heights asked commissioners to look deeper into the incident following two separate ...
A consulting firm hired to review Evendale's response to a neo-Nazi demonstration near Cincinnati earlier this year widely backed up their officer's actions, saying police did the most they could ...
A group of demonstrators wearing black clothing, some holding Nazi flags with swastikas, quickly left a Cincinnati-area overpass when they were confronted by residents Friday, video shows.
CINCINNATI (WXIX) - Hamilton County Sheriff Charmaine McGuffey says she firmly thinks the neo-Nazi group that tried to ...
Another neo-Nazi demonstration took place in Ohio last week on the Interstate 75 overpass near Cincinnati. Even though 13 men were dressed in black waving swastika-emblazoned flags, Black ...
Community members in Lincoln Heights gathered Friday to pray and speak out against a group that displayed Nazi symbols over I-75 in the Cincinnati area. "You will not win," said Julian Cook, a pastor ...
He recalled another case from 1977 in which a Nazi group sued the city of Skokie, Illinois, for blocking a march there. Eventually, the protesters were allowed to march in Chicago.
A group of demonstrators wearing black clothing, some holding Nazi flags with swastikas, quickly left a Cincinnati-area overpass when they were confronted by residents Friday, video shows.
The Jewish Federation of Cincinnati said: We are deeply disturbed by the reprehensible display of hate witnessed today at the Vision Way overpass on I-75, where individuals openly displayed Nazi ...
The Nazi demonstration took place on a sidewalk over Interstate 75 in the village of Evendale, fifteen miles north of downtown Cincinnati, and borders the village of Lincoln Heights.
Cincinnati Mayor Aftab Pureval says the city is considering possible ordinances in response to last week’s neo-Nazi demonstration. It took place outside of Cincinnati, on an overpass between ...
CINCINNATI (WXIX) - Hamilton County Sheriff Charmaine McGuffey says she firmly thinks the neo-Nazi group that tried to “intimidate” Lincoln Heights residents came from outside of Cincinnati.