Lincoln Heights, Nazi and Neo-Nazis

The site of white supremacists waving flags emblazoned with swastikas continues to be a pain point, particularly in historically Black Lincoln Heights and Lockland.
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 ...
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.
The community of Lincoln Heights, Ohio, is uniting after white supremacist demonstrators waved Nazi flags and yelled racial slurs in the historically Black community. NBC News' Antonia Hylton shares ...
The Lockland schools board said that racist demonstrators were on their school grounds, and they had no warnings from police.
LINCOLN HEIGHTS, Ohio (WKRC) - Residents of Lincoln Heights came together in a powerful display of unity on Sunday, following ...
A group of demonstrators wearing black clothing, some holding Nazi flags with swastikas, quickly left a Cincinnati-area ...
Residents of a historically Black community in Ohio forced neo-Nazi demonstrators to retreat from a highway overpass, where ...