Cincinnati Mayor Aftab Pureval says the city is considering possible ordinances in response to last week’s neo-Nazi ...
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 ...
History has shown that when bad actors seek to divide a community, they often do so from the shadows.
Lincoln Heights, a village near Cincinnati, is the first self-governing African-American community north of the Mason-Dixon ...
The sight of armed neo-Nazis waving swastika flags, standing on a highway overpass between Lincoln Heights and Evendale − a ...
Locals, including religious leaders, are referring to these armed individuals as the “Lincoln Heights Protectors.” ...
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.
Ryan Thoreson, an assistant professor at the University of Cincinnati College of Law, spoke with CityBeat about recent ...