Springfield, Ohio, sues neo-Nazi group that it says led Haitian
intimidation
Send a link to a friend
[February 08, 2025]
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio city that was racked with chaos and threats
last year related to an influx of Haitian immigrants filed a lawsuit on
Thursday against a neo-Nazi group that it alleges was at the heart of
the onslaught.
The city of Springfield, Mayor Rob Rue and several others sued the Blood
Tribe, leaders Christopher Pohlhaus and Drake Berentz and seven unnamed
followers in U.S. District Court in Dayton.
They accuse the group of “engaging in, and inciting, a campaign of
harassment and intimidation, motivated by ethnic and racial hatred,
against those who supported Springfield’s Haitian community in the face
of Defendants’ racist attacks."
With legal help from the Anti-Defamation League, the plaintiffs are
asking the court for a jury trial seeking to block the group from making
further threats and to impose damages.
The court file did not list an attorney for the Blood Tribe. Messages
were left at phone numbers listed under Pohlhaus' and Berentz's names.

Springfield, a city of roughly 60,000 west of Columbus, has seen its
Haitian population grow to about 10,000 people in recent years, as
Haitians have fled violence in their home country in search of stability
and employment. Their growing numbers caused friction with local
residents, as schools, roads, hospitals and social programs were taxed
by the large population — and, particularly, after a child was killed in
2023 when a Haitian immigrant driver hit a school bus.
As a candidate, Republican President Donald Trump honed worldwide
attention on the city during a September presidential debate with
Democratic rival Kamala Harris, when he amplified false claims that
Springfield's Haitians were abducting and eating people's cats and dogs.
Thursday's complaint alleges that the Blood Tribe first coordinated a
“hit” against the city before that, in July, casting the influx of
Haitians as an “invasion” that was threatening Springfield's “good White
residents.”
“Members of the Blood Tribe heeded the call,” the complaint said. “Over
the next few months, the Blood Tribe and its members and associates
unleashed a torrent of hateful conduct, including acts of harassment,
bomb threats, and death threats, against Springfield residents who spoke
out in support of the Haitian community.”
[to top of second column]
|

Congregants leave the First Haitian Evangelical Church in
Springfield, Ohio, Jan. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski, File)

The Blood Tribe showed up at the city's jazz and blues festival in
August, according to the court document, displaying guns, waving
swastika flags and wearing matching red shirts, black pants and ski
masks. They made their way to City Hall, where Berentz delivered a
“racist and antisemitic rant,” to which followers responded with
chants of “Seig Heil” and Nazi salutes.
Additional actions the lawsuit alleges against the group include
harassing voicemails, hateful emails and social media posts
demeaning the plaintiffs and their families. The complaint says that
group members also used dating apps to send men looking for drugs
and sex to the residents' homes late at night and publicized their
personal information with the intent of getting others to join in
the harassment.
The lawsuit makes no direct reference to Trump’s remarks, but notes
that Pohlhaus “gleefully took credit for the growing notoriety” the
false claims gained as they spread around the world after the
debate.
The leader of a national advocacy group for Haitians sought to
invoke a private-citizen right to file criminal charges against
Trump and his then-running mate, Vice President JD Vance, shortly
after the debate, alleging they played a role in the chaos and
threats Springfield experienced.
A panel of local judges decided in October to refer the matter to
the county prosecutor for further investigation, rejecting the
Haitian Bridge Alliance’s call to issue arrest warrants or
misdemeanor summonses to both men.
The alliance awaits a decision on an appeal it has filed in the Ohio
Supreme Court. That lawsuit alleges that Clark County Municipal
Court Judges Valerie Wilt, Daniel Carey and Stephen Schumaker
“patently and unambiguously lacked jurisdiction” to meet as a group
as they did when making the referral to the prosecutor.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |