City releases suspect photo in downtown graffiti incident

Camera surveillance photo of suspect in white supremacy logo defacing of downtown buildings. Photo provided||Several areas in downtown Columbus, including in Friendship Alley, were vandalized with graffiti displaying the symbol and a website URL for the white nationalist group Patriot Front. The Republic's editorial board has decided to omit the link to the hate group's website from publication. Photo by Jordan Morey Jordan Morey

2:30 p.m. UPDATE

COLUMBUS, Ind. — Columbus police continue to pursue a suspect caught on surveillance camera in connection with white supremacist graffiti stenciled on downtown Columbus buildings which was discovered early Saturday morning.

The suspect is described as a white male wearing glasses, a gray sweatshirt, blue jeans and a black backpack.

Locations bearing the painted logo of an organization called Patriot Front included the Cummins Corporate Office Building and First Presbyterian Church. Both entities have long been outspoken about racial injustice, including days ago at a rally for stopping hate of Asian-Americans. Cummins leadership also issued a statement last week on voting rights in the wake of a newly passed measure in Georgia that critics said is intended to keep minorities from voting.

The same graffiti also was found Saturday in other nearby cities such as the Cincinnati metro area, according to news reports.

The Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center both classify the group named in the stencils, Patriot Front, as a hate group. The stencils included the message “Reclaim America” and the organization’s website, which The Republic has blurred from photos.

“We’re hoping to get additional images (of the suspect),” said Lt. Matt Harris, Columbus Police Department spokesman. “And we’re hoping someone steps forward who can identify the suspect.”

Harris added that people may provide tips anonymously. A detective is reviewing other security video footage as part of the investigation, he said.

For more on this story, see Tuesday’s Republic.

 

 

Columbus Mayor Jim Lienhoop and Cummins Chairman and CEO Tom Linebarger have released statements about the white supremacist graffiti logos that were placed on buildings in downtown Columbus over the weekend. Columbus Police have also released a photo of the suspect. To provide information about this individual, including an anonymous tip, call the tip line, at 812-376-2619 or at the department’s mobile app at -p3tips.

Several areas in downtown Columbus, including in Friendship Alley, were vandalized with graffiti displaying the symbol and a website URL for the white nationalist group Patriot Front. The Republic's editorial board has decided to omit the link to the hate group's website from publication. Photo by Jordan Morey Jordan Morey The Republic
Several areas in downtown Columbus, including in Friendship Alley, were vandalized with graffiti displaying the symbol and a website URL for the white nationalist group Patriot Front. The Republic’s editorial board has decided to omit the link to the hate group’s website from publication. Photo by Jordan Morey Jordan Morey
The Republic

From Mayor Jim Lienhoop:

“Over the weekend, graffiti was found at several locations in the Columbus
downtown, with images that represent a white supremacist group. It doesn’t really matter
which one because all groups with these beliefs are antithetical to what Columbus stands for
and I don’t want to give any attention to any of these groups.
The statements and symbols in no way represent our community.  In Columbus we welcome
people of all colors, nationalities and ethnicities, who bring with them a rich culture and
diversity that benefits us all. These contributions have not only enriched our community, but
have allowed our community to flourish economically, enabling us to continue to bring in a
dynamic workforce to support local, regional, national, and international companies. Columbus celebrates this diversity, and this is what makes it the “Unexpected and Unforgettable” community we are proud to call home.
At present we believe this graffiti was the act of one individual.  It does not characterize who
we are or what we believe.”

From Tom Linebarger, Chairman and CEO, Cummins, Inc.

Cummins Chairman and CEO Tom Linebarger told The Republic on Monday that the white supremacist graffiti on the company’s corporate office building in Columbus was sad, “very, very disappointing” and “just wrong.”

“We feel very strongly that our communities should be places of welcome and inclusion for all people, and that’s one of the great strengths of Columbus,” Linebarger said. “One of the reasons (that Columbus) is a small town that has done remarkably well in the face of decline in many other small towns is because it has been a place of energy and inclusion and people wanting to come live there from all kinds of places and bringing new economic activity, new ideas, new dynamism to the community. When I walk down the streets in Columbus today and go to the restaurants on Fourth Street, I think, ‘this place is thriving.’ And I think it’s largely due to our diversity and our energy. And so when I see messages of exclusion, it not only seems wrongheaded, like missing the whole point of what makes our communities great, but it’s threatening and bullying to those that should be welcomed and welcomed with enthusiasm.

“It’s sad, it’s disappointing, and I feel badly for those that are impacted directly and feel excluded. I feel that it’s just wrong,” he added.

Linebarger said the graffiti “brings up issues of safety” for members of the community and Cummins employees.

“I always worry about the safety of our employees and how safe they feel in our communities,” Linebarger said. “…Our conversation about Asian American employees and expatriates was exactly that safety question, and so this, I think, brings up issues of safety for other members of our community and employees. So I do worry about that.”

For more on this story, see Tuesday’s Republic.