After a white supremacist demonstration earlier this month on the border of Lincoln Heights and Evendale, residents are still ...
Sheriff Charmaine McGuffey called the roughly dozen masked neo-Nazis "cowards" and asked the Ohio General Assembly to pass ...
Waving banners, bearing anti-racist signs and honking horns, the large procession of vehicles made its way through the area ...
When armed members of a white supremacist group held a protest on February 7 near Lincoln Heights, a historically Black ...
This is what upstanders do. They act. They use their strengths − courage, perseverance, fairness, leadership − to push back ...
Hamilton County Sheriff Charmaine McGuffey said she wants lawmakers to implement harsher legislation for "hate speech" and to make it a crime to wear a mask while carrying a firearm.
The Lockland schools board said that racist demonstrators were on their school grounds, and they had no warnings from police.
Local police reportedly said that "even though the demonstration was carried out without a permit, it was legal." ...
Jackie Congedo, CEO of the Nancy & David Wolf Holocaust and Humanity Center in Cincinnati, told the Cleveland Jewish News ...
Lockland Police Chief Michael Ott said that Evendale police never notified them ... Neo-Nazis chased out of Greater Cincinnati, residents set swastika flag ablaze 'They want to sow division ...
Fighting words are not protected speech. The test for whether hate speech is protected or not comes from a 1969 court case, Brandenburg v. Ohio, which stemmed from a Ku Klux Klan rally in Cincinnati.