What we know about arrests, victims in Cincinnati attack that drew national attention
Multiple videos of the 3 a.m. fight Downtown circulated on social media over the weekend, showing a fight breaking out in a crowd. People threw punches, kicked and jeered as a man on the ground tried to fend off the blows and a woman tumbled to the concrete, bloody and disoriented.
Cincinnati Police Chief Teresa Theetge said only one person in the crowd of '100 or so' called 911.
At a community meeting on the night of July 29, the chief, who has lashed out at bystanders of the fight, bars for overserving and the media, criticized the city's portrayal on national news and how the fight has been used as political ammo.
Here's what we know about the arrests and the fight:
Who has been arrested in connection with the Cincinnati brawl
Montianez Merriweather, 34, and Dekyra Vernon, 24, have been arrested on felonious assault and aggravated riot charges, according to Cincinnati police.
Theetge said on July 29 that a third person was in the process of being arrested. Police have identified two other suspects as well.
Merriweather was indicted on four felony charges on July 10 after investigators said he was found to be in possession of a stolen firearm. Court records show he is charged with carrying concealed weapons, receiving stolen property, improper handling of firearms in a vehicle and weapons under disability.
The last charge is due to a prior felony conviction in 2009 for aggravated robbery, the documents state.
In the weapons case, Merriweather was released after posting 10% of a $4,000 bond.
"He never should have been out," said Ken Kober, Cincinnati police union president.
The Enquirer has reached out to the attorney who represented Merriweather in the previous case for comment.
Hamilton County court records show Vernon has no prior criminal convictions in the county.
The suspects are expected to appear in court on the morning of July 30.
What happened in the Cincinnati brawl
Police have not said what led to the fight at Fourth and Elm streets on a busy weekend in downtown Cincinnati.
Some of the videos posted on social media showed that the fight began as two men circled each other and a crowd gathered. A few people step between them, in an apparent attempt to calm them down. One man appears to slap the other. At that point, more people join in, attacking the man who delivered the slap and kicking and punching him after he falls to the ground.
Another video shows a woman moments before she's knocked to the pavement, approaching the men involved in the fight. Moments later, a woman in the crowd runs up to her and throws a punch. As she stumbles backward, another man punches her in the face so forcefully she goes limp and lies on the street, dazed.
Who are the Cincinnati assault victims
Police have not named the man and the woman who were seemingly attacked.
Jonathan Cunningham, a spokesperson for the Cincinnati police, told USA Today on Tuesday, July 29, in an email that "two victims did go to the hospital the following day with at that time non-life-threatening injuries, treated and released."
He added that he does not know what the status is of their follow-up care.
Residents express safety concerns
Cincinnati's Downtown restaurateurs, including the CEO of Jeff Ruby Culinary Entertainment, have called for a "real plan" to address the recent public safety concerns.
More than 100 people packed a community meeting with Cincinnati leaders Tuesday night that had been scheduled before the fight.
"I will not tolerate lawlessness on the streets of Cincinnati," Theetge said during the July 29 meeting at the Cincinnati Public Library. "I owe it to you as people who live and work here to get the lawlessness under control."
One resident questioned the department's response to the fight during the early hours of Saturday morning, asking Theetge how many 911 calls for noise complaints or other disorder police received prior to the fight breaking out. A woman chimed in that there was at least one, indicating she had called that night.
"Downtown was hopping. It was loud. It was crowded. It was noisy," Theetge said, admitting she did not have the exact number of calls for noise complaints or disorder that night. The chief said there was only one other medical run for the fire department that evening she knew of.
Is there an uptick in crime in Cincinnati?
The latest crime data provided by the city shows shootings are down when compared with data from this time last year, but property crimes, particularly in Over-the-Rhine and Downtown, are up:
In Downtown and Over-the-Rhine, there have been nearly double the number of burglaries, breaking-and-entering incidents and thefts from cars so far this year.
Citywide, there have been 34 reported homicides, compared to 30 at this time last year. More than a third of those killings have happened in the past month.
In Over-the-Rhine, there have been five homicides this year, three of which have been in the past month.
Reported shootings remain down across the city. Cincinnati police report 110 people have been shot so far this year, compared with 142 at this point in 2024.
How the Cincinnati fight videos were shared on social media
Signal 99, a Facebook page which calls itself "a Spicy meme page for Cops, Firefighters, Medics and Dispatchers," shared the video the morning of July 26. It went on to gain traction on multiple platforms, including on Mayoral candidate and JD Vance's half-brother Cory Bowman's own Facebook page, and additional angles of the incident have also been shared. Elon Musk, GOP Republican candidate Vivek Ramaswamy and Harmeet Dhillon, assistant attorney general for the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division, also weighed in.
Politics, race and crime: Why a fight in Cincinnati went viral on social media
The Enquirer will update this developing news report
This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Cincinnati fight: Arrests made after viral videos show crowd attack

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