Nearly every morning for the last month, Jay has been waking up before sunrise to drive around the streets of Lincoln Heights, patrolling neighborhood bus stops to make sure children are getting to school safely.
âWe have a very tight community, so all of our kids, they know us,â he said.
But for anyone outside the community, Jayâs presence might be a mystery. He wears a face covering along with a tactical vest, and Jay is not his real name, which he asked not to use to prevent harassment from hate groups.
Heâs a member of the Lincoln Heights Safety and Watch program, an initiative that started shortly after Feb. 7, when a neo-Nazi group waving swastika flags and shouting racial slurs demonstrated on a highway overpass just on the edge of this majority-Black community about 30 minutes north of Cincinnati.
Officers from Evendale, which borders Lincoln Heights, and the Hamilton County Sheriffâs Office both responded that day. No arrests were made, and Evendale police officers did not take down any names or identifying information from members of the neo-Nazi group, according to the mayorâs office. The Hamilton County Prosecutorâs office is currently investigating the incident to see if criminal charges could be filed.
In a statement, Evendale Mayor Richard Finan said officersâ emphasis on de-escalation âresulted in the incidentâs resolution without injuries to any of the persons involved, passersby or law enforcement officers. During this evolving scene, protecting life took priority over immediate identification.â The Evendale Police Department was the first to respond to the incident, which took place on a bridge linking Evendale with Lincoln Heights.
But for Daronce Daniels, the safety and watch groupâs spokesperson, the police response was just as alarming as the neo-Nazi appearance, making residents feel they wouldnât be protected if another hate group were to visit their town.
âTheyâve been very clear that if it happens again, theyâll allow it to happen again, that their hands are tied,â Daniels said.
Lincoln Heights residents said the police response to the incident was insufficient, prompting Daniels and other members of the Heights Movement, an existing community empowerment organization, to devise the safety and watch program, which includes armed volunteers wearing tactical gear and face coverings. Some of the same volunteers who helped mentor youth through the Heights Movement are now going on armed patrols. Ohio state law allows anyone legally allowed to own a gun to open carry without a permit.
âIâve never felt safer as a Black man in my community than I have right now,â Daniels said. âThese are my friends. These are my cousins, my brothers, my sisters, my aunties.â
Local business owner Eric Ruffin was accosted in his car by the neo-Nazi group as he was coming home from a work meeting.
He said he supports law enforcement, but that its handling of the Feb. 7 demonstration doesnât give him faith that it will protect him in the future. For that reason, he says heâs proud of the neighborhood safety and watch program, even though he wishes it werenât needed.
âWhat I donât understand is how I can be standing here in America in 2025 and somebody can walk up to my window with a swastika and have guns and call me the N-word and law enforcement watch,â Ruffin said.
âWe donât want to become what we hate. You know, we donât want to become a group of people that walk around feeling like we have a reason in America to have to protect ourselves. Thatâs what the Nazis want.â
The village of Lincoln Heights was formed in 1923 for Black families escaping the South, and it incorporated in 1946 as the âfirst African American self-governing community north of the Mason-Dixon Line,â according to the townâs website. However, residents say the community has been underserved by local municipalities, and its police department was disbanded in 2014, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer, leaving it under the jurisdiction of the Hamilton County Sheriff.
For many safety and watch volunteers, that history plays a role in their decision to add to their everyday duties as parents and workers.
âItâs just something that our grandfathers and our great-grandmothers â they started this. So weâre going to make sure that that history stays intact,â said one volunteer, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation from hate groups.
Yard signs that read âWe Support Lincoln Heights Safety & Watchâ are peppered throughout the town, and community members could be seen waving to safety and watch volunteers as they stood guard near the local elementary school one Tuesday morning.
Chantelle Phillips said she saw the neo-Nazi rally playing out on social media as it happened. She said she trusts the neighborhood protection group to be more proactive than officers with the Hamilton County Sheriffâs Office, whose jurisdiction includes Lincoln Heights.
âI feel like itâs more secure now,â Phillips said. âI know my son can walk home and be OK.â
Hamilton County Sheriff Charmaine McGuffey is now calling on the Ohio state Legislature to pass laws that make it illegal to wear a mask âfor the purpose of intimidationâ while open carrying. She said this measure would have given her officers more leeway to make arrests during the neo-Nazi rally.
In an interview with NBC News, she defended her officersâ response on Feb. 7 but said she understands why Lincoln Heights residents are concerned for their safety. Still, she worries that an armed confrontation between neighborhood residents and another hate group could lead to a dangerous situation.
âThey feel they need to arm their residents, and theyâre allowed to,â McGuffey said. âAt some point, we are going to likely face a very dangerous situation that we are trained to handle. But the unknown is, who else is armed? How many juveniles are standing around with a gun in their hand? I cannot be more emphatic that this issue that weâre embedded in, and the way that people are reacting and acting with guns with open carry is directly related to the inaction of legislators who say they support law enforcement, who say they support families and order, and they do not.â