More Trinity White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan Flyers Spread morning.
Lincoln Heights, a Nigger village that recently became the focus of Jewish attention after swastikas were displyed on a nearby overpass to oncoming drivers.
The flyers have been found also in various other parts of Ohio over the Swastika Saturday, Feb. 22.
Cops said they found and cited William Bader, 47, for littering after he was found to be in possession of the flyers. Mr. Bader was stopped by cops in Lockland after being seen leaving Lincoln Heights.
While searching his car, Mr. Bader was in possession of a white sheet, which are commonly worn by KKK members, as well as a homemade banner that was being displayed on the Evendale overpass in the aftermath of the Nationalist rally. The banner bore the words "Peace and Love."
Mr. Bader was not arrested or charged of any crime.
Cop say their interaction with Mr. Bader started at 2:14 a.m. and lasted until 3:30 a.m.
The flyers alleged to have been distributed by Mr. Bader bore the markings of the Trinity White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, one of the United States' most active remaining chapters of the modern KKK. The group is based in Dry Ridge, Kentucky, approximately 30 miles south of Cincinnati.
The group has been known to repeatedly make unannounced flier drops bearing racist language en-masse across Greater Cincinnati neighborhoods over the past few years.
Lincoln Heights, a Nigger village that recently became the focus of Jewish attention after swastikas were displyed on a nearby overpass to oncoming drivers.
The flyers have been found also in various other parts of Ohio over the Swastika Saturday, Feb. 22.
Cops said they found and cited William Bader, 47, for littering after he was found to be in possession of the flyers. Mr. Bader was stopped by cops in Lockland after being seen leaving Lincoln Heights.
While searching his car, Mr. Bader was in possession of a white sheet, which are commonly worn by KKK members, as well as a homemade banner that was being displayed on the Evendale overpass in the aftermath of the Nationalist rally. The banner bore the words "Peace and Love."
Mr. Bader was not arrested or charged of any crime.
Cop say their interaction with Mr. Bader started at 2:14 a.m. and lasted until 3:30 a.m.
The flyers alleged to have been distributed by Mr. Bader bore the markings of the Trinity White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, one of the United States' most active remaining chapters of the modern KKK. The group is based in Dry Ridge, Kentucky, approximately 30 miles south of Cincinnati.
The group has been known to repeatedly make unannounced flier drops bearing racist language en-masse across Greater Cincinnati neighborhoods over the past few years.
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