reSee.it - Tweets Saved By @RealOPEN61322

Saved - July 29, 2025 at 8:17 AM

@RealOPEN61322 - OhioPatriotEducationNetwork

Cincinnati Police Chief Teresa Theetge needs to be arrested out of office for this and literally have her uniform cut off as a National Disgrace to Law Enforcement everywhere. If people want to know why Ohio is such a Corrupt State, this is why. https://t.co/FVkntjxMXU

@GuntherEagleman - Gunther Eagleman™

🚨BREAKING: Cincinnati Police Chief Teresa Theetge is UPSET that a group of White people getting SWARMED by thugs "undoing the good stuff that happened this weekend." She has announced that ONLY five people have been charged so far. @HarmeetKDhillon, KEEP THE PRESSURE ON. There are DOZENS in the video.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Over 150,000 people attended events downtown this weekend, including a basketball tournament, a Reds game, and the Cincinnati Music Festival. An incident at Fourth and Elm occurred late Friday night into Saturday morning, with the first call to police at 3:06 AM. Officers arrived at 3:12 AM, finding the fight already over and most participants gone. Police have identified victims and suspects and have charged five people. Anyone who put their hands on another individual in an attempt to cause harm will face consequences, regardless of which side they were on. All potential charges are being investigated, and alcohol played a significant part in the incident. Police are investigating if individuals were overserved at local establishments. Only one person called to report the incident.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Hi, Barnes. How are you? Good. Good. Thanks a lot. I have to move some of your mics. Alright. So thanks for coming out, folks. Speaker 1: I wanna take a minute to give you guys an overview of the incident from the weekend. First of all, I think it's very important that everybody understands we had well over 150,000 people in the downtown area this weekend. We had a major big three basketball tournament at the arena. We had a reds game with large crowds, and we had the Cincinnati Music Festival. Wonderful, wonderful events for this city and all the people who attended it. Unfortunately, we had one incident one incident late Friday night into Saturday morning that is getting all the attention and undoing the good stuff that happened this weekend. That's the incident that you're well aware of that occurred at Fourth And Elm. I, like many, woke up Saturday morning to the video. The incident occurred. We got our first call at 03:06AM. First officers were on the scene at 03:12AM. Based on the body cam footage that I've watched, that response time is completely acceptable because the downtown area still had traffic congestion from all of the events. Upon arrival, the fight was over with. The fight was over with when the officers arrived, and the majority of the participants were gone. The officers did exactly what they are trained to do. They gathered information from the victims that were still at the scene to complete an offense report. I will tell you, at this time, we have victims and suspects identified, and we have charged five people in this offense. I'm not gonna release that information to you. I will say if individuals were down there and participated in this event, it would be in their best interest to come turn themselves in at one of our police districts. We have five we have charged and anticipate more. Let me be clear. Anyone anyone who put their hands on another individual during this incident in an attempt to cause harm will face consequences. I don't care which side of the incident or the fight they were on. If they place their hands on somebody in an attempt to cause harm, that is unacceptable. This is still an open investigation, and all potential charges are being investigated for everyone involved. All investigative tools and techniques are on the table, including were some of these individuals over served at some local establishments. It is clear to us that alcohol played a part, a significant part, in this incident. I wanna thank every citizen who has come forward and provided us with information. Some of those tips have led to the charges being signed. However, for us to have a 100 or so people down there involved in and or watching this event recording with their cell phones and for us to get only one phone call of this incident is unacceptable in this city. One person did the right thing and

@GuntherEagleman - Gunther Eagleman™

🚨BREAKING: Cincinnati FOP President just went SCORCHED EARTH on the Progressive cancer that's plaguing Cincinnati: "What kind of city and county do we wanna be?" "These people fear no consequences, and until that changes, unfortunately, we're gonna see more things like this."

Video Transcript AI Summary
Ken Cover, president of Cincinnati's Fraternal Order of Police, stated that Cincinnati and Hamilton County are at a crossroads, with some judges supporting law and order and others being soft on crime with cashless bail. He believes the incident in question is a result of this, as people fear no consequences. The speaker noted a racial component, with white victims and mostly black assailants, questioning the societal implications and asking why this occurred. Cover said investigators are looking into race as a component. The speaker expressed concern about not addressing race out of fear when it appears to be a factor. Both agreed that a mob mentality was present, and lamented the lack of individuals stepping in to stop the violence. The speaker suggested that in other states, armed citizens might have intervened.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Joining me now is Ken Cover, president of Cincinnati's Fraternal Order of Police. And I appreciate you being here with us, and it's not to insult your city, but this this is intolerable. It doesn't belong on any American street. It honestly doesn't belong in any civilized society. And I saw a quote by you, Ken, where where you said, what you see in this video and the behavior around there is people that fear no repercussions. Tell me why they would fear no repercussions. Speaker 1: Well, you know, Cincinnati and Hamilton County is really at a crossroads. What kind of city and county do we wanna be? Because right now, you have about half the judges that support, law and order, and then you have half of them that just don't that are being dealt, you know, the cashless bail, that's soft on crime, and this is a result of that. I mean, these people fear no consequences. And until that changes, unfortunately, we're gonna see more things like this. Speaker 0: There's so many different honestly, beyond the law and order element of this, Ken and there is a law and order element of this. I know that 911, they may have received one call during this when you can see there's dozens, if not hundreds of people around the incident. But there's also so many cultural implications going on here. I don't know. Yeah. I don't know how you were raised. I I can tell you this. Any situation, a, where a man hits a woman or b, where five or six or seven or eight or 10 guys are ganging up on one, nobody involved in that is tough. Nobody involved in that is a man. And it says something rotten about any culture that produces individuals who think somehow this is tough. Speaker 1: Yeah. These people clearly have no morals. They have no morals. They don't care about themselves. They don't care about others. And this is certainly a problem that we're seeing time and time again. And it's something that is just disgusting. It's we saw the worst that Cincinnati has to offer that morning. Speaker 0: And look, it's our job to tell the truth, and the truth requires you to state the obvious. There is a racial component to what we're watching on our screen right now. The two victims on the screen appear to be white. Most of the assailants appear to be black. And if we played the game of reversing this, and we have in some instances, there will be a national outcry and rage about the race in races involved in this incident. But here we have it reversed and ask some serious questions about us as a society. Speaker 1: Sure. You know, these investigators are certainly looking that looking into that as being a component of of why this occurred, and that's yet to be determined, I believe. But, I mean, you look at it at face value and certainly could understand why you would draw that conclusion. Speaker 0: Well, it's at point, I don't know what conclusions are to be drawn, but to ask some very serious questions and to be irresponsible not to ask those questions out of fear of invoking race. When this is what we're watching happening on the streets of Cincinnati, I don't care where you live. You know? I don't you know, I was just talking to somebody that works here, Ken. I don't know that this would happen on the streets of Texas. It might. It might not. But there would be someone step in. There's a lot of people armed in the state of Texas or many other states across this country. That don't have to wait for the police. I don't know what's going on in Ohio. Speaker 1: No. You're right. And and if there would have been, some better people that were part of that, it probably would have ended differently, but it just shows you that whole mob mentality. That's exactly what we saw. And I I wish there would have been one person in the crowd that decided that they were gonna step in and actually, you know, be an adult, be a man, and not allow something like this to happen. Speaker 0: You said it right. It's a mob mentality. It courage and bravery to step up against a mob. It takes zero to be part of a mob. And, unfortunately, we'll run short run short on that courage and bravery right now. Ken, thank you so much for being with us. Speaker 1: Yep. Thank you for having me.
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