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 ...
Roughly a dozen people displayed swastika-emblazoned flags on an overpass over I-75 near Evendale and Lincoln Heights.
The appearance of a group of people carrying Nazi symbols and signs bearing white supremacist language in Evendale is ...
A group of demonstrators wearing black clothing, some holding Nazi flags with swastikas, quickly left a Cincinnati-area ...
Traffic camera images show people in all-black clothing with red face masks displaying flags with a red swastika in the ...
Ron Harper was one of many to speak out against the white supremacist protest that took place in Lincoln Heights, Cincinnati on Friday.
After roughly a dozen people displayed swastika-emblazoned flags on an overpass over I-75 near Lincoln Heights and Evendale, residents who live nearby say hate has no place in their communities.
"The protest, while very offensive, was not unlawful," a press release from the Evendale Police Department said.
Roughly a dozen people put flags with swastikas on them on display over Interstate-75 near Lincoln Heights and Evendale.
A group of around a dozen people was seen displaying swastika flags on an Interstate 75 overpass near the Evendale and Lincoln Heights areas.