The Guardian (USA)

Ohio city’s schools get extra police as bomb threats follow false Trump claims

- Anna Betts

Ohio’s governor is deploying the Ohio state highway patrol to provide security to schools in the city of Springfiel­d in response to more than 30 bomb threats the schools have received since former president Donald Trump repeated false claims about Haitian immigrants in the city eating people’s pets during the presidenti­al debate last week.

In a statement Governor Mike DeWine, a Republican, said that many of the bomb threats were coming in from overseas, “made by those who want to fuel the current discord surroundin­g Springfiel­d”.

“We cannot let the bad guys win,” he continued. “We must take every threat seriously, but children deserve to be in school, and parents deserve to know that their kids are safe. The added security will help ease some of the fears caused by these hoaxes.”

None of the threats that have come in to Springfiel­d to date have been legitimate, the governor said, adding that the enhanced security was being used purely “as a precaution to prevent further disruption” within the Springfiel­d city school district.

The enhanced security, which consists of 36 troopers stationed throughout the Springfiel­d city school district, is set to begin on Tuesday, the governor said, and will continue for the foreseeabl­e future.

“Troopers will sweep each building for threats before students and faculty arrive and will stay on-site to provide security throughout the school day and during dismissal,” the announceme­nt reads.

During a news conference on Monday, DeWine said that at least 33 separate bomb threats had been received at Springfiel­d schools, adding that “each one of which has been responded to, and each one of whom has been found as a hoax”.

DeWine also directed Ohio homeland security to begin conducting vulnerabil­ity assessment­s on critical infrastruc­ture in Springfiel­d and to provide various tower cameras for use by the Springfiel­d police department to enhance situationa­l awareness.

The Ohio department of public safety has also arranged for bomb detection dogs to be stationed in Springfiel­d each day.

This comes as last week, local officials said that two hospitals in Springfiel­d were sent into lockdown after

bomb threats, and other bomb threats had been called in to government buildings, forcing their closure and causing local schools to be evacuated.

The bomb threats in Springfiel­d began last week, after the presidenti­al debate on 10 September between Trump and Vice-President Kamala Harris, in which Trump repeated an unfounded and baseless social media rumor that Haitian immigrants in Springfiel­d were abducting and eating local pets.

The rumor apparently originated from a viral video of a resident of Springfiel­d telling the town’s council that immigrants in the community had killed ducks from a local park for food.

During the debate, one of the moderators from ABC News, said that the city manager in Springfiel­d said that there had been no credible reports of specific claims of pets being harmed, injured or abused by individual­s within the immigrant community.

Before Trump mentioned the rumor during the debate, his running mate, the Ohio senator JD Vance had also promoted the baseless claim that the Haitian immigrants in Springfiel­d were abducting and eating pets.

According to the New York Times, between 12,000 and 20,000 Haitian immigrants live in Springfiel­d, Ohio, with most having come to the US legally. Many have found work in factories and warehouses that had been struggling to fill job openings, the Associated Press reported.

 ?? Photograph: Patrick Aftoora Orsagos/AP ?? Mike DeWine speaks at city hall in Springfiel­d, Ohio, on Monday. ‘We cannot let the bad guys win,’ he said.
Photograph: Patrick Aftoora Orsagos/AP Mike DeWine speaks at city hall in Springfiel­d, Ohio, on Monday. ‘We cannot let the bad guys win,’ he said.

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