Current Affairs

After the new Nazis gets the police to protect the police, some black residents in Ohio express their lack of credibility


Some black leaders and residents of the Greater Cincinnati expressed their dissatisfaction after masked people New Nazis It was allowed to gather on the highway bridge without arrest.

Some have called for a rapid investigation into the response of the Evandal police and the deputies of the Hillton County County Office after the demonstration on Friday afternoon on the 75th Highway Bridge between the village of Idandal and Lincoleen Heights, a historical black black community.

The biggest question for critics of the response is the reason why none of the new Nazi demonstrators have not been arrested after the group faced members of society and firearms presented on both sides.

Reverend Julian Armand Cook of the Bumaian Bachelor’s Church in Lincoln Heights said in an interview that the hate demonstration, which included anxious flags, was a shock.

He said, “To see her appears at the gate of this historic society, the first black black city north of the Masson Dixon line, it is very clear the message you send,” he said. “It was so, I was angry. I was hurt. I was shocked.”

The Evandal police said in a statement on Tuesday that the officers were obligated to protect the rights of the first amendment to the appearances and that, although the demonstration was carried out without a permit, it was legal. The police department said that ticket demonstrators for smaller matters such as transporting people at the back of the truck truck – which they took while leaving – without bound seats, were overlooked in the name of violence.

The administration did not address the nature of the demonstration, which some black population described as threatening existentially.

Eric Rovin, a resident of Lincoln Heights, said at the village meeting on Tuesday night that he was called “one of the demonstrators.”

“Do you want a society that you do not feel safe?” He asked.

The police department said that the officers were placed in a burning position that was solved without injuries or loss of lives.

“One of the groups was largely armed with multiple firearms and tensions between the opposition groups,” she said. “In this way, the dominant priority was to continue the efforts made to isolate groups, reduce the new participants and rid the situation.”

To reach this goal, the administration said that the officers allowed the U-Haul box to reach safely through the opposite violators, and one of the officers toured a new Nazi protester who was told that it was unsafe returning to a car due to the counter- the demonstrators were in the path.

In a separate statement, Sherif, the province of Hamilton Charmin McGovi, said that the removal of the situation on the bridge, so no one had a top priority to respond to the deputies.

“Lincoln Heights residents are understandable,” she said. “We continue to work with society, and we confirm that there is no place to hate in Hamilton Province.”

Evendale village held two meetings in the city hall on this issue in two days, and The new Nazi demonstration was the subject of a discussion of the Hamilton Provincial Commissioners Council on Tuesday.

The prayer circle was seen after a group that displayed the flap of the swasts, appearing on the bridge between the 75 states in Idandal, Ohio, on Friday afternoon.LIZ DUFOUR / The Enquirer / Usa Today Network

“We had questions about the reason for the absence of arrests when there were clear violations of the law,” Cook said.

Ohio Cecils Thomas, D-Cincinnati, said that it will support legislation to ensure that the authorities have tools that they can use to arrest these future demonstrators.

“I can guarantee you that we will get some actions, even if this happens again, then the application of the law will have the authority to take action.” WLWT from Cincinnati.

District Commissioner Alicia Reese, a spokesperson for the committee, supported invitations to conduct an investigation into the law enforcement response, saying that the appearances were very comfortable.

She said that residents are seats for themselves.

“They had to go to their home, get weapons, go out there and risk life,” Reese said at the meeting. “And they felt that the only thing that happened was a defense in their minds for the Nazis.”

Cook praised a community with a famous history of autonomy to take care of him in the face of hatred.

He said, “What should remain at the forefront of this story is the way this society enters to rid this situation themselves, and they did this in a way that preserved their dignity and safety.”

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