Midwest
Singer John Legend lectures hometown to 'embrace' Haitian migrants, dismisses pet-eating claims in Ohio city
Singer-songwriter John Legend took to his Instagram account Thursday following Tuesday’s presidential debate to denounce and debunk former President Trump’s claims that Haitian migrants were eating cats and dogs in Legend’s hometown city of Springfield, Ohio.
While Springfield has seen a significant increase in the number of Haitian migrants arriving in the city, Legend dismissed the viral claims of pet-snatching and -eating.
“Nobody’s eating cats. Nobody’s eating dogs,” he said in a lengthy video while donning a white robe from his Beverly Hills mansion more than 2,200 miles away from Springfield. “The bottom line is these people came to Springfield because there were jobs for them, and they were willing to work.”
FOCUS GROUP REACTS TO TRUMP CLAIM THAT MIGRANTS ARE ‘EATING THE DOGS’ IN OHIO TOWN
Pop star John Legend has urged people in his home city of Springfield, Ohio, to embrace the influx of Haitian immigrants amid former President Donald Trump’s claims that they were eating residents’ pets. (Getty Images/Michael Lee)
Captioning his post “How about we love one another. See each other’s humanity…. Let’s talk about Springfield, Ohio,” the Grammy- and Oscar-winning entertainer said he was born “John R. Stephens” and raised in Springfield. He urged residents to show “grace” to the roughly 15,000 immigrants who have arrived there.
“They wanted to live the American dream, just like your German ancestors, your Irish ancestors, your Italian ancestors, your Jewish ancestors. Your Jamaican ancestors, your Polish ancestors – all these ancestors who moved to this country,” Legend continued in his video.
SPRINGFIELD, OHIO, RESIDENT DETAILS ‘DYSTOPIAN NIGHTMARE’ AS HAITIAN MIGRANTS OVERRUN TOWN: ‘BREAKS MY HEART’
Musician John Legend rehearses prior to the start of the third day of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago last month. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
Thousands of Haitians have arrived in Springfield since the COVID-19 pandemic, and residents have been pointing to an uptick in crime, mayhem and car crashes due to the massive influx of new residents. In a town of 58,000 people, roughly 20,000 Haitians have arrived, according to city officials.
Residents have pushed back on the influx, sharing outrage at the ongoing surge during recent city council meetings to demand action on the issue.
Legend fired back pointing out the challenges these immigrants are facing while they are just seeking “opportunity for themselves and their families in the American dream.”
SPRINGFIELD RESIDENT SAYS ROADS ARE LIKE ‘ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK’ AFTER HAITIAN MIGRANTS OVERRUN RURAL TOWN
The Haitian community center in Springfield, Ohio, left, and a sign welcoming motorists to the city. (Michael Lee/Fox News Digital)
Online backlash to Legend’s post was swift, however, with many pointing out his hypocrisy as he no longer lives in Ohio.
“You house them in your private palace then,” one person commented.
“Telling us how it is while wearing a bath robe in your mansion is pretty wild. If it’s so great, move the family back to Springfield,” another person wrote.
“Do you still live in Springfield? I didn’t know that. How many migrants are you inviting into your neighborhood?” another person commented on the post.
“So when are you opening your house to illegal immigrants???!!!! I’ll wait,” another user wrote.
Charlie Kirk, founder and CEO of Turning Point USA and host of “The Charlie Kirk Show,” also chimed in on X, expressing concern over Legend’s post and disconnect with Americans.
HAITIAN REFUGEES ‘DON’T UNDERSTAND THE LAWS,’ FORMER LAWMAKER SAYS AMID FATAL WRECK, CULTURAL CLASHES
“John Legend took to social media to lecture the residents of his home town Springfield to be more accommodating to the 20,000 Haitians who just swamped the town,” Kirk wrote.
“Of course, John Legend doesn’t live in Springfield. Like most smug liberals, he would never in a million years live out the consequences of his ideology. Instead, he sits safely inside an $18 million Beverly Hills mansion, while belittling the pain, fear, and loss suffered by the working class people he left far behind him,” Kirk said.
In response to a query from Fox News Digital, local officials pushed back against the claims surfacing online.
“In response to recent rumors alleging criminal activity by the immigrant population in our city, we wish to clarify that there have been no credible reports or specific claims of pets being harmed, injured or abused by individuals within the immigrant community,” the city said.
Fox News Digital’s Adam Shaw and Bailee Hill contributed to this report.
Read the full article from Here
Illinois
Prevent plant claims likely in soaked southeastern Illinois – Brownfield Ag News
News
Prevent plant claims likely in soaked southeastern Illinois
A technical services representative with BASF says some southeastern Illinois farmers have struggled to find windows to plant this year.
Mike Probst, who’s based in Effingham County, says his area has been inundated with heavy rains throughout the spring.
“Weather event after weather event of two to three inches of rain really made it tough on folks in that area.” He says, “I think there’s fields that have probably been replanted 3 times. I know a lot of the corn that went in at the end of April, most of that didn’t make it or wasn’t a quality enough stand, so it got worked up.”
He tells Brownfield it’s causing farmers to adjust plans on the fly and to consider prevented plant insurance claims.
“We’ve already had several questions where folks have asked if they can come back and plant soybeans based off of what they’ve applied on their corn crop that year, especially in river bottom ground that’s been flooded multiple times.” He says, “But yeah, I know for a fact that’s going to impact a good number of growers.”
Probst says the disjointed planting season has led to crops in varying stages of development, which could pose management challenges for producers throughout the rest of the growing season.
“Maybe the yield potential is not there, but we have actually seen in some of our data, some of that later planted corn is actually where we see some of our biggest fungicide responses.” He says, “It actually goes through more of its life cycle where it is combating disease if that disease does show up early like this year.”
He says the crops in the area that were planted timely and have withstood the storms are doing well and have benefited from the rains.
AUDIO: Mike Probst – BASF
Indiana
Indiana BMV, ISP dispel rumours about Blackout license plates
INDIANA (WPTA) – The Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles and Indiana State Police are addressing online rumors about the BMV’s new license plate design.
The BMV says that when they post about the Blackout plates on their social media accounts, they receive comments claiming the design makes it easier for plate recognition cameras, like Flock, to read.
WATCH: Fort Wayne Flock camera showdown reflects nationwide debate | Story continues below
ISP confirmed that Automated License Plate Recognition cameras can read all Indiana plates with the same efficiency and accuracy as the Blackout version.
Police say the color and design of a license plate do not impact the camera’s ability to read it.
“I wouldn’t want Hoosiers to miss out on the Blackout plate because of incorrect information,” Indiana BMV Commissioner Kevin Garvey says. “The Blackout plate’s purpose is to give our customers more choices when it comes to their plate design. It’s simply a fun style choice.”
The BMV says more than 240,000 Hoosiers have purchased the Blackout plate since its release in August 2025. Learn more about it here.
Copyright 2026 WPTA. All rights reserved.
Kansas
Linn County, Kansas, man killed in early Thursday crash
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Linn County, Kansas, man died in a single-vehicle crash early Thursday morning.
The Kansas Highway Patrol says just after midnight Thursday, a 41-year-old Centerville, Kansas, man was driving south on Mills Road about 6.5 miles southwest of La Cygne when he lost control of a 2012 Hyundai Elantra.
The vehicle left the roadway and struck an embankment, causing the Hyundai to overturn before coming to rest on its top.
The driver and sole occupant of the car, Edward Schultz, was pronounced deceased at the scene.
—
If you have any information about a crime, you may contact your local police department directly. But if you want or need to remain anonymous, you should contact the Greater Kansas City Crime Stoppers Tips Hotline by calling 816-474-TIPS (8477), submitting the tip online or through the free mobile app at P3Tips.com. Depending on your tip, Crime Stoppers could offer you a cash reward.
Annual homicide details and data for the Kansas City area are available through the KSHB 41 News Homicide Tracker, which was launched in 2015. Read the KSHB 41 News Mug Shot Policy.
-
Arizona3 minutes agoArizona Chamber installs Monica Coury as board chair – Chamber Business News
-
Arkansas6 minutes agoArkansas accumulates $655 million general revenue surplus, fifth-largest in state history | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
-
California11 minutes agoWhat’s open, closed for Independence Day weekend in California?
-
Colorado18 minutes agoMAP: Where Colorado wildfires are burning
-
Connecticut21 minutes agoLocal priest dies after crashing car into tree in West Hartford, police say
-
Delaware26 minutes ago
County councilman says Newark data center plan paused after deal
-
Florida33 minutes agoOutrage over ‘cruel’ Florida move to ban undocumented students from college
-
Georgia36 minutes agoGeorgia officials urge drivers to add emergency contact to license record