The Lockland schools board said that racist demonstrators were on their school grounds, and they had no warnings from police.
The Lockland Local School District has released a statement calling for a third-party investigation in the actions of law enforcement in relation to a neo-Nazi demonstration last week.
Residents burned the remnants of what flags they were able to grab. They not only remained on the overpass until the ...
The vote to pass the anti-DEI higher ed bill came less than a day after hundreds of opponents testified at the Ohio ...
Republicans in the Ohio Senate approved a sweeping higher education overhaul − hours after hundreds of students and faculty ...
Jackie Congedo, CEO of the Nancy & David Wolf Holocaust and Humanity Center in Cincinnati, told the Cleveland Jewish News ...
Many Americans won't spend money at major retailers for a day. Why the no-spend day is gaining traction now, and the Ohio ...
A new wave of groups with racist, Nazi ideology began ramping up public demonstrations and marches throughout the country as ...
The group of neo-Nazis, some of them armed, hung a racist banner and waved flags with swastikas on them over a bridge on I-75 ...
Lockland Mayor Mark Mason Sr. said in a public announcement no police agency was aware of the demonstration beforehand and no policy agency escorted the group to or from the overpass.
Lincoln Heights residents yelled for them to leave and set fire to one of their flags. They took a stand against white supremacists. While the neo-Nazis were there to spread hate, Jamaal Howard says ...
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