Columbus city leaders condemned the Neo-Nazi march, with a statement from City of Columbus asserting that acts of "hatred and bigotry" would not be tolerated.
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine and other state officials released statements denouncing a reported neo-Nazi march Saturday.
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Donte Bell and Dwight Holland were enjoying the Ohio State football game on Saturday afternoon when they started hearing loud racial slurs coming from outside their home in the Short ...
The group’s actions in Columbus on Saturday, part of a recent pattern of white supremacist incidents in the country, were ...
Video showed nearly a dozen people wearing black pants, shirts and head coverings and red masks covering their mouths ...
"We will not tolerate hate in Ohio. Neo-Nazis -- their faces hidden behind red masks -- roamed streets in Columbus today, carrying Nazi flags and spewing vile and racist speech against people of color ...
Emboldened neo-Nazis have been condemned for a racist demonstration that took place in Ohio’s Short North Arts District this ...
The unidentified people were spotted around 1 p.m. walking through the Short North neighborhood, according to Columbus ABC ...
A group of masked neo-Nazis marched through Columbus, Ohio, carrying flags emblazoned with swastikas and shouting racist and ...
Following a group of neo-Nazis that were seen marching through Columbus's city streets on Saturday, Gov. Mike DeWine and ...
CINCINNATI (WXIX) -Ohio Governor Mike DeWine and others are responding after there were reports of a neo-Nazi group who ...
Video showed nearly a dozen people wearing black pants, shirts and head coverings and red masks covering their mouths ...