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Cincinnati, Ohio – Residents of South -West Ohio are expressing displeasure in the local leadership after the fight for a viral street in their backyard, which captured the country’s attention. A resident, a local political activist, has partially convicted Fox News Digital.
On July 26, Saturday night violence in Cincinnati city, which made a woman unconscious on the road to a male attacker, was the result of a city, which was not “ready” due to political ideology, Adam Kohaler, a native of Price Hill, told Fox News Digital. He said that the response to the fight was “not leadership.”
“The leadership comes out and says,” Hey, we have a problem. Here is my solution to fix it, “Kohlar said. “But instead, they want to be coward and hide the fact that crime is actually happening.”
Cincinnati mayor and other local authorities have faced warm criticism over the notion in recent times that they are not taking crime seriously. An elected Democrat, Councilman Victoria Park, Posted on social media Saying that the victims of the fight “begging for that beatdown.”
Cincinnati man who lost his eye in unresolved random beats
Fox News Digital spoke to Adam Kohaler, a resident of Cincinnati, about the crime in the city. (Fox News Digital)
“This is a Democrat monopoly that he found here,” Kohaler, an entrepreneur and former candidate of the Hamilton County Commissioner, told Fox News Digital. “So, I mean whatever they want can do a lot. And there is a lot of excuse for that kind of rhetoric, okay, you know, you know, previous injustice and you know that now I can think that I can say that whatever I want and this is an excuse.
Holi, the woman brutally knocked out and suffered an injury to the attack, Told Fox News This week he has not received a phone call from the mayor or top officials, “Just apologizing for what happened and these thugs and criminals should have started in jail when they should start in jail.”
Kohaler told Fox News Digital that the Democrats running the city have “an agenda” and “want to see a certain way” and “ignore the problem.”
“This is a lot of these ideologies that come out of universities, right?” Kohaler said. “Every generation feels that they understand something about crime and they are soft-hearted people, they wanted to do things, but you know, what Giuliani did in New York, such policies, such things work.”
Cincinnati police chief says that 100 out of 100 people see and record violent attacks, only 1 has said 911
(LR) Jermaine Matthews, Dominique Kittle, Dekyra Vernon, Montianz Merriweather and Patrick Rosemond are facing various allegations for their alleged roles in viral beatdown on July 26, 2025, Sincinati, Ohio. (Hamilton County Sheriff Office; Fulton County Sheriff Office; J Black)
Koehler, who was talking to Fox News Digital outside Gubernatorial candidate Vivek Ramaswamy Town hall tooT, on the west side of Cincinnati, stated that figures such as Ramaswamy, Sen Berney Moreno, and Ohio native VP JD Vance are due to being optimistic about addressing the crime spike downtown.
“Those people got power,” said Kohaler. “I mean you start throwing DOJ here and start checking some things, what is happening, why there was not more police?”
Kohlar said, “I mean that whenever you have a monopoly in any city, there is a lot of cruelty. Obviously, you are going to do corruption. And it is just, it’s here, and it is finished in what you see.”
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Sen speaks at a press conference with Berney Moreno, Holi, which is a victim in Sinsinti on 26 July in July, on Wednesday, August 6, 2025, in the Fraterninal Order of Police Headquarters in Ohio in Ohio. (Julia Bonvita/Fox News Digital)
Moreno Said this week He is introducing the “Act of Holi”, which is aimed at abolishing the rotating door of the justice system for repeated criminals.
Moreno told reporters, “Let’s be honest, because many times you guys are qualifying it as a controversy.” “It was attempted to kill an innocent woman. And the person had a rap sheet that was one mile long. Any person who has a rap sheet should walk on the streets of any Ohio city.”
Julia Bonavita and Peter D’Buska of Fox News Digital contributed to the report.