MAGA Sheriff Faces Consequences for Threatening Own Constituents
Portage County, Ohio, Sheriff Bruce Zuchowski asked his constituents to report local Kamala Harris supporters.
The Ohio sheriff who likened migrants to “human locusts” and threatened local supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris is reaping the consequences of his own actions.
In a 3–1 vote on Friday, the Portage County elections board agreed to strip Sheriff Bruce Zuchowski of his election security duties, formally removing the sheriff’s office from providing security during in-person voting, reported The Daily Beast.
Earlier this month, the Ohio sheriff willingly threw himself into electoral politics in a Facebook post that referred to Harris as a “Flip-Flopping, Laughing Hyena,” inviting his constituents to send him the personal addresses of locals with Harris’s campaign signs in their yards.
He then proceeded to double down on the dangerous rhetoric after a county commissioner from the local Republican committee resigned over the comments.
“I believe that those who vote for individuals with liberal policies have to accept responsibility for their actions!” Zuchowski wrote.
The Ohio secretary of state’s office decided Tuesday that Zuchowski’s divisive statements didn’t break state election laws.
“Our office has reviewed the comments and determined they don’t violate election laws,” Dan Lusheck, deputy communications director for the Ohio secretary of state, told the Akron Beacon Journal. “The sheriff can speak and answer for himself about the substance of his remarks. We’re focused on running an election that begins with military and overseas ballots going out this Friday.”
The area’s local NAACP chapter responded to Zuchowski’s statements by holding an emergency meeting, which drew more than 100 attendees.
“They’re afraid to vote. They’re afraid to put signs in their yard,” Frank Hairson, the communications chair of the NAACP chapter, told the Ravenna Record-Courier.
Zuchowski’s posts were seemingly made in reference to a virulent conspiracy theory spread by top Republicans, including Donald Trump and J.D. Vance, about Haitian immigrants eating other residents’ pets in Springfield, Ohio—roughly 200 miles away from the sheriff’s district.
Since Vance and Trump began elevating the myth around the time of the second presidential debate, Springfield has received at least 33 bomb threats, forcing it to evacuate and temporarily shutter several of its schools, colleges, festivals, and a significant portion of its government facilities, including City Hall, the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, the Ohio License Bureau, the Springfield Academy of Excellence, and Fulton Elementary School.
Multiple city officials, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine, and even Vance himself have stated in no uncertain terms that the conspiracy is false.