Springfield officials, Ohio activists brace for end to Haiti's Temporary Protected Status designation



Springfield, Ohio, featured prominently in 2024 election-time debates as a case study in the fallout of the Biden-Harris administration's disastrous immigration policies — a place where President Donald Trump suggested migrants were "eating the pets of the people that live there."

The blue-collar city, which had a population of just over 58,000 in 2020, was flooded in subsequent years by tens of thousands of Haitian migrants — migrants whom Springfield Mayor Rob Rue admitted "taxed" the "infrastructure of the city, our safety forces, our hospitals, our schools." According to the city, there are upwards of 15,000 migrants presently residing in Clark County alone.

'Temporary means temporary.'

Many of the Haitians who overwhelmed Springfield and other American cities initially entered the U.S. illegally but were spared deportation on account of Haiti's Temporary Protected Status. That status, which Haitian migrants have enjoyed since January 2010 and roughly 350,000 Haitian migrants enjoy today, is set to expire on Tuesday.

In anticipation of a potential immigration crackdown following the designation's expiration date, Mayor Rue and members of the Springfield City Commission approved a resolution on Tuesday urging federal law enforcement to "comply with city policies on masks and officer identification to preserve the public peace within the community."

Blaze News has reached out to Mayor Rue for comment.

Former DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas reinstated Haiti's TPS in 2021, then doubled down in subsequent years, expanding eligibility for protection along the way.

The Trump Department of Homeland Security announced in July, however, that Haiti's temporary status was coming to an end.

"After reviewing country conditions and consulting with appropriate U.S. Government agencies, the Secretary determined that Haiti no longer continues to meet the conditions for designation for TPS," said the announcement in the Federal Register. "The Secretary, therefore, is terminating the TPS designation of Haiti as required by statute."

RELATED: Trump administration halts visas for 75 nations whose people gobble up American welfare

Photo by Luke Sharrett/Getty Images

While DHS initially sought to terminate the TPS designation for Haiti on Sept. 2, 2025, the termination was blocked and the status preserved until Feb. 3 by the New York-based U.S. district court judge overseeing the case Haitian Evangelical Clergy Association v. Trump.

In November, the DHS noted that "in compliance with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York's final judgment, the current Temporary Protected Status designation period for Haiti ends February 3, 2026."

The loss of status would not only mean that previously covered Haitians will lose their work authorization but that they could be given the boot.

Emily Brown, Ohio State University Moritz College of Law's Immigration Clinic Director, told the Ohio Capital Journal, "At that point, they could potentially be arrested, detained, or put in removal proceedings unless they have already applied for some other form of relief they have in addition to TPS, or that they are applying for in addition to TPS."

The ACLU of Ohio is among the liberal activist groups panicking over the prospect of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement targeting Haitian migrants in Springfield starting on Feb. 4.

"This despicable surge in lawless ICE officers descending upon Springfield will ignite swells of fear within the Haitian community, terrorize our black and brown neighbors, and cause considerable damage to citizens and non-citizens alike," stated J. Bennett Guess, executive director of the ACLU of Ohio.

"The ACLU of Ohio urges state and local elected officials to do everything in their power to protect the 30,000 Haitians living in Central Ohio," he continued.

Prior to Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes — a Biden-appointed lesbian judge who previously worked as a lawyer to fight the first Trump administration's immigration policy — could decide to suspend the expiration of Haiti's TPS.

Reyes may be emboldened, after all, by a ruling on Wednesday from a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The panel — comprising three Democrat-nominated judges — suggested Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem exceeded her authority when ending the TPS for Venezuela and Haiti.

The appellate court's ruling won't have an immediate effect, as the U.S. Supreme Court cleared Noem in October to revoke temporary legal statuses while litigation proceeds.

DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in response to the appellate court's ruling, "Temporary means temporary, and this is yet another lawless and activist order from the federal judiciary who continues to undermine our immigration laws."

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The Left Would Rather Embrace Mass Immigration Than Help Struggling Americans

[rebelmouse-proxy-image https://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Screenshot-2025-07-24-at-10.43.15 PM-1200x675.png crop_info="%7B%22image%22%3A%20%22https%3A//thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Screenshot-2025-07-24-at-10.43.15%5Cu202fPM-1200x675.png%22%7D" expand=1]The praise of immigrants over troubled native-born Americans demonstrates the Left’s tendency toward convenience and replaceability.

Dad making delivery sees carjacker entering his vehicle — and his child also is inside car, cops say. Things soon get primal.



Police in Springfield, Massachusetts, said a father told them he was outside of his vehicle making a delivery around 10 p.m. May 19 when he noticed an unknown individual enter his car.

Worse still? The father told police his child also was in the vehicle at the time.

Officers arrested 40-year-old Angel Tapia-Otero and charged him with carjacking and kidnapping, police said.

Police said the dad got back into his car from the passenger side and tried to remove the intruder from the driver's seat and fought with him.

With that, police said the intruder began accelerating the vehicle — and soon hit another car head-on.

In the aftermath, the driver of the other vehicle involved in the collision could see two people fighting in the other car with a child inside it, police said.

RELATED: 17-year-old opens fire while attempting carjacking, cops say. But victim also has a gun — and teaches suspect painful lesson.

Image source: Springfield (Mass.) Police Department

After arriving at 10:50 p.m. at the intersection of Belmont Avenue and Keith Street — the scene of the head-on crash with injuries — officers arrested 40-year-old Angel Tapia-Otero and charged him with carjacking and kidnapping, police said.

Police said it wasn't clear if Tapia-Otero knew a child was inside the car when he entered it. Police said the suspect also was charged with operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license.

Blaze News reached out to Springfield police and asked if the victim or his child or both were injured, and if so, what were the extent of their injuries. Police told Blaze News they don't provide information about crime victims — but they did say Tapia-Otero was injured in the fight with the victim and taken to a hospital.

The Hampden County Correctional Center on Tuesday morning confirmed to Blaze News that Tapia-Otero was still in the facility after being booked into jail May 20. Officials said he is not bailable and that they couldn't provide his next court date.

WWLP-TV reported that Tapia-Otero is from Springfield. The city is located in Western Massachusetts, on the shores of the Connecticut river just north of the border.

RELATED: DC bartender fights back against 3 teenage wannabe carjackers — and wins: 'I work too hard for what I have'

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Lincoln’s Political Rise Shows Americans’ Indefatigable Pioneer Spirit

As the nation approaches its 250th birthday, that pioneer spirit — of striving and thriving, and of merit overcoming obstacles placed in its path — can provide inspiration for us all.

Shotgun-riding raccoon found with meth pipe in its mouth during bizarre traffic stop arrest



An Ohio woman was arrested during a routine traffic stop after police discovered crack cocaine — and a raccoon in the front seat with a glass meth pipe in its mouth, according to authorities.

At around 7:15 p.m. Monday, an officer with the Springfield Township Police Department pulled over a vehicle because the driver reportedly had an active warrant and a suspended driver's license.

'While our officers are trained to expect the unexpected, finding a raccoon holding a meth pipe is a first!'

"However, things took an unusual turn," the Springfield Township Police Department said in a statement.

"As Officer Branham returned to the vehicle, he observed a raccoon named 'Chewy' sitting in the driver's seat with a meth pipe in its mouth," police stated. "Chewy had somehow gotten hold of a glass methamphetamine pipe, leading officers to further inspect the vehicle."

Police said a subsequent search revealed a "bulk" amount of methamphetamine, crack cocaine, and three used glass meth pipes.

The driver — 55-year-old Victoria Vidal from Akron — was arrested "without incident" and charged with possession of drugs, three counts of possession of drug paraphernalia, and a citation for driving with a suspended license.

The Midland Daily News reported that a "grand jury will consider additional charges related to crack cocaine possession, pending lab results."

Vidal reportedly was turned over to Cuyahoga Falls Police on her active warrant.

The Springfield Township Police Department said, "Thankfully, Chewy the raccoon was unharmed, and notification was made to the proper authorities to determine that she has the proper paperwork and documentation to own the raccoon."

The police department joked, "While our officers are trained to expect the unexpected, finding a raccoon holding a meth pipe is a first! No raccoons were hurt or injured in this incident."

Police did not specify if Chewy would be returned to Vidal.

In Ohio, residents reportedly are permitted to own raccoons as pets if they file appropriate documents.

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Blaze News investigates: Springfield sees lives saved, Haitian exodus thanks to Trump's deportation threats



Republicans and other politicos identified Springfield, Ohio, in the lead-up to the 2024 election as municipal proof of the ruinous nature of the Biden administration's immigration policies.

Much was said about Springfield, and a great deal was promised in the way of possible remedies; however, the spotlight has since shifted and national attention along with it.

Blaze News recently reached out to city officials, local law enforcement, and the Department of Homeland Security in hopes of ascertaining whether anything has actually changed — for better or worse.

While the mayor and elements of his office are tight-lipped about the matter, the head of the Tremont City Police Department in the greater Springfield metropolitan area revealed that a great deal has changed socially and demographically since November — and that much of it can be attributed to President Donald Trump.

"I can't even fathom how bad it could be if that election went completely opposite," said TCPD Chief Chad Duncan. "There were people living in tents behind businesses, just inside of the wood line. The parks were overrun with homeless immigrants, and you don't see that now."

"So I guess you got to thank the good Lord that He decided to give us what we asked for, which was President Trump, and he did it in a very timely fashion," added Duncan.

Before

The blue-collar city, which had a population of just over 58,000 in 2020, was flooded over a short period of time by tens of thousands of Haitian migrants.

The majority of these migrants were temporarily authorized to stay under humanitarian parole programs, including the Biden administration's controversial Cuban Haitian Nicaraguan Venezuelan parole program, which authorized 211,010 Haitian parolees by October 2024.

Many of those who flocked to Springfield initially entered the country illegally — as Vice President JD Vance suggested, to the liberal media's displeasure, during the Oct. 1 vice presidential debate — but were spared deportation on account of Haiti's Temporary Protected Status.

If a nation has an ongoing armed conflict, has an environmental disaster, or faces other extraordinary conditions, the DHS secretary can designate that country for TPS, thereby shielding its nationals squatting in the U.S. from deportation for a period of six to 18 months.

Biden's DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas reinstated Haiti's TPS in 2021, then kept doubling down in subsequent years, expanding eligibility for protection along the way.

'We have had this influx that has taxed all these services.'

The rapid population growth experienced by Springfield, which was driven by the influx of largely deportation-immune Haitian migrants who in many cases were entitled under federal law to exploit public benefits such as food stamps and Medicaid, resulted in immense strains on the city's health care, law enforcement, housing, and schools.

The New York Times noted, for instance, that between 2021 and 2023, Springfield's health clinic saw a 13-fold increase in Haitian patients, which left its staff and budget greatly overburdened.

Springfield Mayor Rob Rue told PBS News last year, "The infrastructure of the city, our safety forces, our hospitals, our schools — Springfield is a close community and has a big heart, but at the same point, we have had this influx that has taxed all these services."

Citizens' unease over the migrant crisis — which at one point prompted a petition to recall the entire city commission — was exacerbated by cultural differences with elements of the Haitian population; harassment; special treatment afforded to migrant students; concerns over wage suppression and job replacement by migrants; allegations of Haitians eating pets and wildlife; and a significant spike in Haitian-caused traffic accidents.

'It's been overrun. You can't do that to people.'

One accident in particular prompted some Ohioans to rethink their acceptance of the new reality foisted on them by the Biden administration .

Hermanio Joseph, a Haitian immigrant who had been in the country for roughly one year, took to the roads of Clark County, Ohio, on Aug. 22, 2023, in a minivan without a driver's license. Driving recklessly, he veered across the center line of State Route 41 and into a school bus full of children, injuring 23 and taking the life of an 11-year-old American boy, Aiden Clark.

Following the horrific crash, numerous citizens made abundantly clear at the Aug. 28, 2023, city commission meeting that they were reaching their breaking point. Things would, however, get worse before they could get better.

After

When asked whether there have been any signs of progress or relief in the migrant crisis in Springfield following the election, Chief Duncan told Blaze News, "Things have changed drastically."

"When our president got elected, it seems that a majority [of the Haitian migrants] packed up and either went to New York or Florida," said Duncan. "At one point, you couldn't even find luggage in the vicinity because they'd all been bought up because they were leaving."

President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance indicated on the campaign trail that they would send packing many of the Haitian migrants paroled and/or granted temporary protected status by the Biden administration.

"We're going to have the largest deportation in the history of our country," Trump told reporters in September. "And we're going to start with Springfield and Aurora, [Colorado.]"

"It has nothing to do with Haiti or anything else. You have to remove the people, and you have to bring them back to their own country," Trump told NewsNation the following month. "Springfield is such a beautiful place. Have you seen what's happened to it? It's been overrun. You can't do that to people."

Sure enough, on his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order instructing the DHS secretary to "terminate all categorical parole programs that are contrary to the policies of the United States established in my Executive Orders, including the program known as the 'Processes for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans.'"

The DHS indicated in an unpublished notice obtained by CBS News late last month that the Trump administration was planning to revoke the parole status of those allowed into the U.S. under the CHNV program. Those who have not yet obtained asylum, a green card, or TPS would be placed in deportation proceedings.

Like the 350,000 Venezuelan migrants who will soon lose work permits and temporary protection from deportation following DHS Secretary Kristi Noem's Feb. 1 decision, Haitian migrants could soon lose their temporary protected status.

During his first term, Trump tried to revoke TPS for Haitian migrants but was blocked by a California-based Obama judge. A three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ultimately vacated U.S. District Judge Edward Chen's injunction but did not issue its directive to the lower court to make that ruling effective.

There appears now to be an opportunity and the political resolve to go the distance. Trump has vowed to terminate the TPS designation for Haiti.

The DHS had no comment on the proposed revocation of CHNV parolees' legal statuses or whether Noem will soon terminate Haiti's designation for TPS.

While CHNV legal statuses appear not to have yet been revoked en masse and there has been no announcement of Haitian migrants losing their protected status, multitudes of Haitian nationals in Springfield apparently weren't keen on waiting around for the other shoe to drop.

Following the election, there were reports of large numbers of Haitian migrants bailing out of Springfield in anticipation of possible deportation efforts.

"People are fully aware of the election result, and that is why they are leaving," Jacob Payen, co-founder of the Haitian Community Alliance, told the Guardian in November. "They are afraid of a mass deportation."

Chief Duncan told Blaze News that the fear of Trump's promised deportations was heightened by the understanding that "Ohio is not a sanctuary state and Springfield is not a sanctuary city" and by the clear presence of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in the area.

'Our death toll would have probably been extremely high if some of those migrants didn't vacate this area.'

"As soon as he was elected, they were rolling out by the droves," continued Duncan. "It could only be that they feared they were going to be deported right then and there."

The exodus of migrants has transformed Springfield, suggested Duncan.

"We haven't had as many vehicle accidents. Our hospitals are not full like they were all last year. Our schools are starting to go back to normal class sizes," said the police chief.

Duncan indicated that those migrants who have remained are for the most part "following the letter of the law now" and have done the work to get their driver's licenses.

"I haven't towed any Haitians' vehicles in the last three or four months," he said. "The people that want to stay here are doing the right things to make sure that they are able to stay, and the ones that did whatever they wanted to — it seems they vacated."

Duncan indicated that Trump's threat of deportation not only prompted positive change but may have saved lives.

"Our death toll would have probably been extremely high if some of those migrants didn't vacate this area and go elsewhere," said Chief Duncan. "I mean, they were living in the woods, in tents behind businesses, and this kind of cold weather — they would have never made it."

The exodus of migrants also meant that there is more housing availability for those who remain as well as less strain on local resources during what has ended up being a "really, really bad winter."

Blaze News reached out to Mayor Rob Rue and City Manager Bryan Heck for comment about the migrant crisis and the apparent exodus of Haitians. A city spokeswoman indicated that they "are not providing any comments on these matters at this time."

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Haitian Leader Complains Even Their Own Country Can’t Handle Haitian Migrants

On Saturday Leslie Voltaire, the president of Haiti’s transitional presidential council, whined to the Associated Press (AP) that Haiti can’t handle an influx of its own people, as President Donald Trump takes steps to restore America’s national sovereignty. Voltaire visited the Vatican to “ask for help for Haiti,” according to the AP. Voltaire lamented that […]

4 juveniles definitely choose wrong house to prank with 'ding-dong ditch' game



A quartet of juveniles definitely chose the wrong house to prank with a game of "ding-dong ditch" in Springfield, Missouri, last week. The prank involves pressing the doorbell of a residence and then running away.

The group on Jan. 19 approached a home in the Edgewood Street area occupied by 40-year-old Melvin Rankin and rang the doorbell, KOLR-TV reported. They observed Rankin looking out the window, so they rang the doorbell a second time, the Centre Daily Times reported.

Rankin pointed his gun at the back of one juvenile’s head, police told the Daily Times. He then asked them, 'Who sent you?' and 'Where’s the gun?' the paper said, citing the probable cause statement.

The garage door began to open, and the juveniles heard a gunshot from inside the garage, the Daily Times said, citing court documents. The paper said the juveniles fled to their car and started to speed off.

Rankin, with a gun in hand, got into his vehicle and began to follow them, police told the Daily Times.

The group reached a dead end where Rankin stopped, pointed a gun at the four juveniles, and told them to lay on the ground, KOLR reported, citing court documents. The gun in question was a sawed-off shotgun, HuffPost reported, citing the affidavit.

Rankin pointed his gun at the back of one juvenile’s head, police told the Daily Times. He then asked them, “Who sent you?” and “Where’s the gun?” the paper said, citing the probable cause statement.

The juveniles said they apologized and told Rankin they were playing ding-dong ditch, and he let them go, the Daily Times said, citing court documents. However, KOLR said Rankin also demanded and took the keys to their vehicle and left.

The next day officers arrested Rankin during a traffic stop and conducted a search of his residence, KOLR said, adding that police found a 20-gauge shotgun in his home along with two handguns and a controlled substance in his vehicle. The shotgun had an apparent handmade stock and shorter barrel, HuffPost reported, citing the affidavit.

Police also said Rankin is on permanent GPS monitoring over a previous statutory rape conviction, has failed to report as a sex offender, and also admitted an affiliation with the Crips gang, HuffPost noted.

Rankin’s girlfriend told police that someone rang their doorbell and that when she looked through a Ring camera, she saw a masked male at the front door holding a gun, HuffPost noted, citing the affidavit.

The girlfriend added that when the doorbell rang a second time, she and Rankin went to the garage, HuffPost reported, citing the affidavit, adding that while Rankin decided to open the garage door to confront the person at the door, she went back into the house. KOLR said she later looked at the Ring video again and saw the individual was wearing gloves.

Rankin is charged with six felonies, including first-degree robbery, two counts of armed criminal action, unlawful use of a weapon, and unlawful possession of a firearm, the station reported.

Police also said Rankin is on permanent GPS monitoring over a previous statutory rape conviction, has failed to report as a sex offender, and also admitted an affiliation with the Crips gang, HuffPost noted.

KOLR added that Rankin also has been convicted of possession of a controlled substance, breaking and entering, and driving while revoked.

Rankin is being held in Greene County Jail without bond, the Daily Times said, citing court records, and his attorney information was not listed.

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Check Yourself, PolitiFact. Here Are The Biggest Lies Of The Year

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PolitiFact’s ‘Lie Of The Year’ Isn’t Actually A Lie At All

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