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Cincinnati – A candidate for Cincinnatis Mayor’s championship beat AT on Monday afternoon Viral downtown beatdown That has rescheduled all over the country.
“People don’t even see the meaning of calling 911,” said Cory Bowman, who is also Vice President JD Vances half -brother and is a candidate for the mayor of the city.
Bowman took second place in an impartial primary race in May. He will accept Pureval in November in November. His thoughts about the citizens who saw no sense in call 911 came after police chief Teresa Theetge said in a press conference that only one person called the police while the attack continued.
“This is unacceptable not to call the police,” she said during a press conference on Monday. “The traffic was terrible. People saw it. They fought before traffic. Why didn’t people call us?”
Bowman said that he was not surprised by the events in the early Saturday morning, which was captured by the current city tour, which took place at the corner of the Fourth and Elm Street in front of a night club in the city center in the city center.
On Friday evening in downtown Cincinnati, a fight broke out and was injured. (X/@Anthea06274890)
“There are two aspects of it,” Bowman told Fox News Digital. “Firstly, it is a wake -up call. It is a wake -up call that we have to have better policy. We have to be able to take immediate measures to ensure that the residents and companies are safe in our communities. The nation basically sees what we are already known in the city.”
Despite the fact that the viral attack could dye the reputation of its city, Bowman said that it is important for the nation to see what really happens in cities, and that what has happened in Cincinnati is a microcosm of what is happening in urban areas nationwide.
“Now I think this is important for the nation to see them because the nation sees that several areas in the city center in America see failed guidelines that ruin their cities,” he said. “And they see unrest, they see fights, they see that the crime is increasing, they see laws that are not enforced.”
He told Fox News Digital that the crime in the city not only agreed in the summer months, but has increased as a whole over time, which he claims to deny the local government and the media.
On Friday evening in downtown Cincinnati, a fight broke out and was injured. (X/@Anthea06274890)
“Whenever May and June rolled around, there were all of these press conferences and all these statements from the media that found that the crime has decreased, the crime decreases,” he said.
“Well, the reality is that everyone who lived in the city center that some things may have been extended due to the snow and rain, but as soon as the warmer months came about, the guidelines … The not enforcement of the law will actually only allow a free time in the city,” he continued.
Bowman said Cincinnati Police Department (CPD) is initially understaffed.
“And then it is that these police officers do not see a point in actually booking the criminals because there are actually prosecutors in the city who have a rotating tower mentality in which the criminals go and then released on the street,” he said.
“And so many of these officers don’t even book people because they know that they will be back on the street next week. So sit in your cars and try to do the best what you can do. You have a heart for the city, but you are hindered by the existing guidelines.”
Cory Bowman’s mayor candidate from Cincinnati speaks in March at an election campaign event. (Cory Bowman via Facebook)
Ken Kober is a 25-year-old veteran of the Cincinnati Police Department. He repeated Bowman’s feelings that the hands of the police were bound and told Fox News Digital that the blows are something that “cannot accept as a society”.
“It is simply nothing more than a wild attack on a few people. I mean, they see someone who is completely defenseless and tries to cover their heads on their face and they are only appeared by several people,” said Kober.
Kober was angry that the positive aspects of the weekend, the Cincinnati Reds three home games and the famous Cincinnati Jazz Festival, were overshadowed by the malignant viral video.
He also accused the local officials for the increasing crime.
“We have a problem with judges who do not want to hold people into account, and if they know that there are no consequences for their actions, when people go out and we see events on how it happened on Saturday morning,” he said.
The corner of the fourth and elm street outside of Love, a local night club, in which the strokes, as on July 28, 2025, took place in Cincinnati. (Peter d’Abrosca/Fox News Digital)
“I hope that the court system will actually keep these people in full. It would be nice to see the headlines in six or eight months that these people were convicted, and they are now being given the maximum sentence for every crime for which they were condemned.”
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On Monday afternoon, CPD said it Five people calculated in connection with the incident. The names of the individuals were not published.
Cincinnati head of the police, Teresa Theetge, added that the attack gave over 100 witnesses, and some even turned. However, only a call was made to 911.
Police sources announced FOX News earlier a day that they are working on identifying at least eight other suspects.
People with information are asked to call the police from Cincinnati or Crime stop at 513-352-3040.