An Ohio sheriff this weekend urged residents in his county to collect the addresses of homes sporting signs for Vice President Kamala Harris, arbitrarily suggesting that there would be an influx of undocumented immigrants if she wins the presidential race.
Bruce Zuchowski, the sheriff of Portage County who is seeking reelection, made the incendiary remarks Friday in two identical posts on his personal and professional Facebook accounts.
“I say … write down all the addresses of the people who had her signs in their yards!â€� Zuchowski (R) said. That way, he said, when undocumented immigrants — which he referred to as a “locustâ€� — flooded in, “Weâ€
The sheriffâ€
Alongside his caption, Zuchowski posted photos of Fox News coverage showing footage from Springfield, Ohio, and Aurora, Colo. — two cities that have been in the national spotlight in recent weeks as former president Trump and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), have publicly repeated baseless, inflammatory claims about the immigrant communities there.
Comments are limited on both of Zuchowskiâ€
In Monday posts on X, the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio condemned Zuchowskiâ€
“For the sitting sheriff of Portage County to be engaging in the very type of behavior heâ€
Since Harris ascended to the top of the Democratic ticket in July, she and Trump have publicly criticized each otherâ€
In recent weeks, Trump and Vance have taken the immigration-policy-based criticisms to a new level by repeating unsubstantiated comments about Haitian immigrants in Springfield. They falsely claimed that Haitian immigrants were stealing and eating pets in the town.
During the presidential debate last week, Trump repeated the Springfield rumor. Though he was fact-checked by a moderator — Ohio officials have denied the claims — it was too late.
The rumor had already spiraled into an onslaught of racist memes and anti-immigrant sentiments online. In the days since the debate, Springfield has received threats of violence. Schools, the city hall and other government buildings were evacuated last week after bomb threats.
Of the TV news photos Zuchowski posted Friday, one showed Springfield with the chyron: “Kamalaâ€
The posts stoked fear across Portage County residents, said Reney Romine, president of the countyâ€
Since Sunday, Romine said sheâ€
“Itâ€
Anthony Badalamenti, a Republican county commissioner, said in a video that he would resign from the countyâ€
Zuchowskiâ€
Romine said the local NAACP chapter called an emergency meeting for later this week to talk about how to address the communityâ€
“What a world it would be if we could all have our own opinions and still get along in that space,� she said. “You know, what happened to that?�