25 years later: Cincinnati recalls racial tension, progress made since riots

Years of mounting racial tension and police intervention shooting deaths brought the city of Cincinnati to the brink in April of 2001, culminating in multiple nights of rioting and $3 million in damage.

The flashpoint came in the early-morning hours of April 7, 2001, with the death of a 19-year-old in an Over-the-Rhine alley.

That man, Timothy Thomas, became the 15th Black man killed by police since 1995. Cincinnati Police officer Stephen Roach shot Thomas in the chest after a brief foot pursuit. At his trial, Roach would testify that he thought Thomas was reaching for a gun when he was really just pulling up his pants.

Prosecutors built a criminal case against Roach, but a jury ultimately acquitted him.

Former Cincinnati leaders reflect on the chaos of the April 2001 riots

Three key figures then — Mayor Charlie Luken, then-Fraternal Order of Police President Keith Fangman, and the Rev. Damon Lynch III, head of the Black United Front — worked to keep the city from imploding entirely…

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