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Cincinnati Cop Anonymously Sues 4 People for Complaints Officer Used 'Ok' Hand Gesture

Cincinnati Cop Anonymously Sues 4 People for Complaints
Officer Used 'Ok' Hand Gesture 1

A Cincinnati police officer is suing at least four people for defamation after they filed a complaint alleging he intentionally used a racist hand gesture in June. His suit could eventually target more than 20 citizens, according to The Cincinnati Enquire.

The officer filed the suit anonymously and is listed as “M.R. A Cincinnati Police Officer” in sealed documents related to the case. Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Megan Shanahan ruled to seal the records after the officers’ attorneys claimed people shared his personal information online. Several local news outlets and advocacy group Friends of Bones, which was previously involved in the lawsuit, have petitioned Judge Shanahan to unseal them. Court hearings remain open to the public.

The lawsuit, filed in July, came about one month after the Cincinnati Police Department received formal complaints accusing officer Ryan Olthaus of racist conduct. Complaints reportedly alleged that Olthaus, who joined the Cincinnati police force more than a decade ago, used the “OK” hand signal during a city council meeting held to address concerns from Black Lives Matter activists amid ongoing demonstrations.

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The gesture can be regarded as a racist symbol depending on the context of its use, the Anti-Defamation League told NPR last September. The organization flagged it as a hate symbol around the same time, after uncovering memes and other images that associated the signal with white supremacist sentiments posted to Internet forums. Some used the gesture in reference to “white power”.

The unnamed officer’s lawsuit claims citizens’ accusations of racism are false, according to news outlets privy to the lawsuit’s contents, including the Enquirer.

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“People in the crowd made the juvenile, unfounded, incorrect and hysterical claim that (the officer’s) innocuous ‘okay’ gesture was a ‘white power’ or ‘white supremacist’ hand signal intended to intimidate people,” the suit reportedly says of the June council meeting.

Court filings identify four individuals currently involved in the suit: against two women—Julie Niesen, who is listed as the primary defendant, Terhas White, James Noe and Alissa Gilley.

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A Cincinnati police vehicle is pictured in July 2019, while parked in the Ohio city. An unnamed Cincinnati Police Department officer filed a lawsuit against at least four individuals after complaints accused him of racist conduct earlier this summer. Raymond Boyd/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty

Jennifer Kinsley, an attorney representing two women who filed complaints about the officer earlier this summer, told the Enquirer her clients are protected under a First Amendment clause meant to shield civilians who accuse public officials of racism from legal repercussions.

“This lawsuit is being filed not only to stop these people from speaking up, but also to make people afraid to say something when they see something that is wrong,” Kinsley said in comments to the newspaper.

Newsweek reached out to Niesen and the Cincinnati Police Department for comments but did not receive replies in time for publication.

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