Trump’s Ohio Comments Proven True

[Wilfredor, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons]

Earlier in the week, Donald Trump shocked the debate crowd by claiming that immigrants in the small town of Springfield, Ohio, had begun killing the wildlife and eating the carcasses for dinner.

The former president’s comments were immediately “fact-checked” by the biased moderator, David Muir, who said he spoke to the city manager, and the manager, for obvious reasons, claimed it wasn’t happening.

Now an investigation by The Federalist has revealed that the city manager and Muir were lying. A police phone call recording obtained by the outlet reveals that a local resident in Springfield reported seeing a group of Haitian migrants carrying four geese two weeks ago.

The outlet reports the stunning and disturbing recording.

“I’m sitting here, I’m riding on the trail, I’m going to my orientation for my job today, and I see a group of Haitian people, there was about four of ’em, they all had geese in their hand,” the caller tells the public services dispatcher in the audio recording of the call.

According to a police report reviewed by The Federalist, the call was placed on Aug. 26, before the Columbus suburb located roughly 50 miles from the state capital became nationally known this week for epitomizing the nation’s migrant crisis. The caller told the dispatcher he saw four migrants in total, two men and two women, each carrying a single goose.

“I was trying to get my phone out and I was trying to make it to this orientation on time,” the caller continued. “I’m time crunching here, and I saw that, I’m like, ‘Yeah this has got to be reported,” he tells the non-emergency police dispatcher.

“How many geese did they have?” the dispatcher asks the caller in the recording.

“Uh, they each had one,” he replies.

Springfield, Ohio, has become a symbol of Biden’s radical immigration policies. The influx of Haitian migrants has sparked significant concern among local residents, as highlighted during recent Springfield City Commission meetings. Residents voiced their frustrations over the strain on local resources, with Senator JD Vance emphasizing the challenges of accommodating such a large number of newcomers in a city of 55,000 people. Issues like housing shortages, strained hospital and school services, and the impact on daily life have fueled the debate. Some residents, like Noel, have felt increasingly unsafe, citing encounters with homeless migrants in their neighborhoods, leading her and her husband to consider leaving their home of 45 years.

Harris has bragged about sending over 100,000 from the war-torn nation to towns across the country. Many of them have been shipped to this small town in Ohio.  

The tension escalated as residents like Lonnie Cole Jr. expressed anger over migrants allegedly bypassing legal immigration procedures. He criticized the city for offering aid to those who, in his view, do not deserve to be in the country and urged the commission to reconsider its support for the migrants. The ongoing debate in Springfield reflects broader national concerns about immigration and its impact on local communities, as residents grapple with the changes brought by the sudden arrival of a large migrant population.

[Read More: Trump Says No To Second Debate]