Springfield, Ohio, deals with rash of bomb threats in wake of bogus claims from Trump, Vance

Ohio stationed state police at Springfield schools Tuesday in response to a rash of bomb threats — the vast majority that officials said came from overseas — after former U.S. president Donald Trump and his running mate, Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance falsely said legal Haitian immigrants in the small city were eating dogs and cats.

Schools, government buildings and elected officials’ homes in Springfield were among the targets of more than 30 hoax threats made last week that forced evacuations and closures. Two more schools had to be evacuated on Monday, and the high school was threatened on Tuesday. Republican Gov. Mike DeWine said a foreign actor was largely responsible, but he declined to name the country.

Even with dozens of Ohio State Highway Patrol officers fanning out to protect the Springfield City School District’s 18 schools, many parents opted to keep their children at home. At one elementary school, some 200 students were absent Tuesday out of a population of 500.

“There’s still a high level of fear due to these unfounded threats and hoaxes that have marred our existence really for going on a week now,” said Robert Hill, chief executive office of the Springfield City School District, appearing at a news conference with DeWine.

WATCH | Trump fact-checked during debate: 

Moderator fact-checks Trump’s claim that illegal immigrants are ‘eating the pets’

After Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump claimed that illegal immigrants were eating dogs and cats in Springfield, Ohio, ABC News Presidential Debate moderator David Muir said the city manager told ABC News ‘there have been no credible reports’ of such incidents.

Two highway patrol officers have been assigned to each school, a protocol that will be continued “as long as it is necessary,” DeWine said.

“We do not believe there is a real threat out there, but we are certainly not going to take any chances. And we want parents to be assured that their children can be kids and can go to school and can learn,” he said.

State police were visible at a middle school earlier Tuesday, with students dropped off as normal.

Trump amplified debunked rumours

Thousands of Haitian immigrants have settled in recent years in the predominantly white, blue-collar city of about 60,000, about 70 kilometres from the state capital of Columbus, where they have found work in factories and warehouses that had been struggling to fill job openings.

The sudden influx has strained schools, health-care facilities and city services and has driven up the cost of housing — while becoming a major political issue after Trump amplified debunked internet rumours about pet-eating during last week’s presidential debate. Vance has repeated the false claims.

“We did not have threats seven days ago. We did not have these concerns seven days ago. We did not have these hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars spent in Springfield and from the state of Ohio in support seven days ago. We do today,” Springfield Mayor Rob Rue said Tuesday.

Rue did not mention Trump or Vance by name, but called on national leaders to “temper their words and speak truth.”

“That’s what Springfield is asking. We need peace. We need help, not hate.”

Marie Morette, a congregant of St Raphael Catholic church, prays during Mass in Springfield, on Sunday. (Jessie Wardarski/The Associated Press)

‘Exhausting’ and ‘harmful’ 

U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris, answering questions at a forum for Black journalists in Philadelphia on Tuesday, said her heart breaks for Springfield. She said the inflammatory rhetoric about Haitian immigrants is “exhausting and it’s harmful and it’s hateful and and grounded in some age-old stuff that we should not have the tolerance for.”

Vance has not backed down, writing on the social media platform X that “citizens are telling us that there are problems” in Springfield and that he has repeatedly condemned the threats. He accused Harris of ignoring the residents’ legitimate concerns and trying to stifle debate.

DeWine’s spokesperson, Dan Tierney, said Tuesday that “the vast majority” of the bomb threats have come from overseas. He said a criminal investigation by multiple law enforcement agencies yielded information on the origin of the threats.

Tierney was not more specific on how investigators determined they came from a foreign country, nor would he reveal the name of the country, saying that could encourage additional threats.

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