Topline
Bomb threats targeting Springfield, Ohio, facilities are likely linked to a baseless right-wing conspiracy theory targeting Haitian immigrants in the city, mayor Rob Rue said Friday, as local schools closed and evacuated for a second day.
One threat cited a conspiracy theory that the city’s immigrants were eating local pets and wildlife.
Key Facts
Springfield police have cleared the facilities targeted in a bomb threat on Friday, Rue said, adding the person who sent threats voiced “frustrations about immigration, about Haitians within this community and about political leadership,” ABC News reported.
The Springfield City School District said in a statement to Forbes that Roosevelt Middle School was closed, while Perrin Woods Elementary and Snowhill Elementary were evacuated, citing unspecified information from Springfield police.
It is not immediately known which buildings were targeted in Friday’s threat, though there were no other threats to Springfield City School District facilities, school officials said.
Springfield officials said Thursday “multiple facilities” were targeted by a bomb threat, including city hall, Fulton Elementary School and the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, among other facilities, and every Clark County, Ohio, building was closed out of “an abundance of caution.”
The threat included disparaging claims against Haiti and a baseless conspiracy theory championed by former President Donald Trump and Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance that Haitian immigrants in Springfield are eating local pets, USA Today reported.
Get Forbes Breaking News Text Alerts: We’re launching text message alerts so you’ll always know the biggest stories shaping the day’s headlines. Text “Alerts” to (201) 335-0739 or sign up here.
What To Watch For
Springfield city officials said Thursday the FBI was assisting in an investigation to determine the bomb threat’s origin.
Key Background
Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, spread claims that appeared to originate from a user on a Springfield, Ohio, Facebook page falsely claiming their Haitian neighbors were eating a local cat. On Tuesday, the conspiracy theory gained more traction after Trump repeated the claim, suggesting immigrants in Springfield are “eating the pets of the people that live there.” Springfield Police investigations commander Mike Kranz told Forbes there are “no credible reports” of immigrants in the city harming pets, though Vance has doubled down on the claims despite indicating it was “possible” they were false. The Facebook user also told NewsGuard they didn’t “have any proof” substantiating the claim. Other right-wing commentators and officials—including Elon Musk and Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas—have also continued circulating the claims. Biden administration officials have condemned Republicans spreading the conspiracy theory, including National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby, who said the claims were “disinformation” based on “an element of racism.”
Big Number
20,000. That’s the estimated number of Haitian migrants who have settled in Springfield, city officials reportedly said. Most of these migrants have traveled to the city since the pandemic, fleeing escalated gang violence in Haiti.
Further Reading
ForbesBiden Official Condemns False Haitian Immigrants Conspiracy Theory As ‘Racism’ And ‘Disinformation’By Conor Murrayspringfield-news-sunSpringfield police say no reports of pets stolen, eaten, after viral social media post