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Auto parts maker to lay off 1,200 in Ohio amid fraud charges. Here’s where

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Auto parts maker to lay off 1,200 in Ohio amid fraud charges. Here’s where



First Brands closing corporate office in Cleveland, three other Ohio facilities amid bankruptcy. Its CEO is facing federal fraud charges

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  • Auto parts supplier First Brands is closing four Ohio facilities, including its Cleveland corporate office.
  • The closures will result in the permanent layoff of more than 1,200 workers by the end of April.
  • The company’s founder and former CEO and his brother are facing federal charges in an alleged multi-billion dollar fraud scheme.
  • First Brands, which supplies products like Fram oil filters, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September 2025.

A major auto parts supplier is laying off more than a thousand workers and closing four facilities around Ohio, including its corporate offices in Cleveland.

First Brands, whose founder and former CEO is facing charges in multi-billion dollar fraud scheme, notified the state in late February of its intent to permanently close the facilities by April 30. The layoffs created by these closures are also permanent, according to the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act notices filed with Ohio Job and Family Services.

The company — which supplies Fram oil filters and Anco wiper blades, among others — filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September 2025. In January, First Brands had started winding down some of its operations in North America while seeking a buyer, according to Reuters. However, several potential buyers “have suddenly and unexpectedly withdrawn or narrowed their bids” according to one of the recent WARN notices.

Which facilities are closing? And how many jobs are being lost? Here’s what to know.

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First Brands closing four Ohio locations, cutting more than 1,200 jobs

According to WARN notices, First Brands is closing the following facilities:

  • Corporate Office, 127 Public Square, Suite 5300, Cleveland. In the first round of layoffs here, 146 workers were cut on Feb. 23, according to a WARN notice sent that date. A second notice dated Feb. 27 for this address advises that the facility will close on April 30, and the remaining 110 workers will be laid off.
  • FRAM facility, 851 Jackson St., Greenville. According to a WARN notice sent Feb. 27, this facility will close April 30 and 302 jobs will be lost.
  • TMD facility, 1441 N. Maule Road, Tiffin. All 407 employees will be terminated when this facility is permanently closed on April 30, according to a Feb. 27 WARN notice.
  • TMD facility, 515 E. Gypsy Lane Road, Bowling Green. First Brands will also close this facility on April 30, laying off 302 workers, according to another Feb. 27 WARN notice.

In total, First Brands is laying off 1,267 workers in these four closures.

Indictment alleges Cleveland auto supplier CEO, VP defrauded lenders. Both plead not guilty

First Brands Group founder and former CEO Patrick James and his brother, Edward, a senior vice president, are accused of defrauding lenders out of billions of dollars before the auto parts supplier fell into bankruptcy according to an indictment made public Jan. 29 in Manhattan federal court.

The nine-count indictment includes charges of running a continuing financial crimes enterprise, bank fraud, wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy. Both pleaded not guilty on Feb. 4, Reuters reports. A trial is set in July. Both could face decades in prison if convicted.

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Prosecutors said the defendants “perpetrated ​a series of fraudulent schemes” against First Brands’ lenders and financing partners, Reuters reported, including allegedly inflating invoices, double- and triple-pledging loan collateral, falsifying financial statements and concealing substantial liabilities.

“It is very much Mr. James’ intent to go into court and proclaim his innocence,” said Scott Hartman, a lawyer for Patrick James, according to Reuters.

Patrick James and Edward James are Malaysian-born U.S. citizens.

Seth DuCharme, a lawyer for Edward James, told Reuters that his client is not going to “run off to Southeast Asia where he allegedly has all this money.”

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What is First Brands Group? Company filed for bankruptcy in September

First Brands, founded in 2013, was one of the world’s largest suppliers of auto parts such as brakes, filters and ‍lighting systems, according to Reuters. It had $5 billion in sales last year.

Prosecutors say First Brands borrowed billions to finance its growth. Those loans were secured by inventory and physical assets like plants and equipment. Reuters reports that this left First Brands vulnerable to cash flow issues and dependent on its access to the capital from those loans.

The company filed for bankruptcy in September 2025. Patrick James stepped down as CEO that October, according to Crain’s Detroit Business.



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Protesters rally at Ohio Statehouse to oppose bill targeting drag shows

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Protesters rally at Ohio Statehouse to oppose bill targeting drag shows


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  • Less than 100 people gathered at the Ohio Statehouse to protest a bill that would criminalize certain drag shows.

Less than 100 protesters gathered at the Ohio Statehouse on May 27 to protest legislation that would criminalize certain drag shows.

Individual organizers, as well as Ohio 50501 and Ohio Equal Rights, organized the demonstration, said Logan Moon, one of the organizers. Some of the attendees were dressed in drag and donned bright colored face paint, colorful clothing, and high heels as requested in the protest announcement. One of the attendees also had a drum.

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As with other protests in Columbus, members of the Columbus Division of Police Dialogue Team stayed on the periphery of the demonstration. Troopers from the Ohio State Highway Patrol also watched from a distance as one of the organizers led chants criticizing state lawmakers.

The protest was in response to Ohio House Bill 249, which would criminalize certain drag performances anywhere but adult entertainment facilities if they’re deemed obscene or harmful to children. It also changes the definition of public indecency, with an exception for women who are breastfeeding.

The Ohio House voted to pass the legislation 63-30 on March 25. It is now before the Ohio Senate, where no hearings have been scheduled yet. Republicans control both chambers of the General Assembly.

Moon, 24, said Ohio HB 249, and hundreds of other bills throughout the country targeting transgender people, are an example of “genocide” against trans people in the country.

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Moon said she was disappointed by the low turnout at the May 27 protest, saying it was an example of the apathy of the general public.

After one of the organizers led a series of chants, protesters marched at least once around the Ohio Statehouse. There were no counterprotesters in attendance.

Reporter Shahid Meighan can be reached at smeighan@dispatch.com, at ShahidMeighan on X, and at shahidthereporter.dispatch.com on Bluesky. 



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Columbus public safety leaders say they were abused by OSU doctor

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Columbus public safety leaders say they were abused by OSU doctor


Another Central Ohio public safety leader has come forward to say he was molested by former Ohio State University doctor Richard Strauss. Tim Becker is Gahanna’s public safety director and a former deputy chief of the Columbus Police Department. Becker explained former Columbus Fire Chief Jeff Happ’s decision to publicly share his abuse helped encourage him to do so as well.



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Ohio first responders reveal they were abused by Richard Strauss, former OSU doctor

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Ohio first responders reveal they were abused by Richard Strauss, former OSU doctor


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More Columbus first responders publicly shared at a May 26 press conference that they were sexually abused by former Ohio State University doctor Richard Strauss, as the leaders of Columbus’ fire and police unions called for justice and accountability for abuse survivors.

“Today is about courage. Today is about truth. And it’s about the men standing beside other men who for decades carried trauma and silence that was never their to carry,” said Michael DiSabato, an Ohio State wrestler who competed for the Buckeyes from 1987-91.

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DiSabato, the whistleblower who initially spoke out about sexual abuse that he and others endured at the hands of Strauss, was joined by fellow former Ohio State student athletes and central Ohio first responders outside the Woody Hayes Athletic Center.

Tim Becker, Gahanna’s Director of Public Safety and a former Deputy Chief of the Columbus Division of Police, publicly shared for the first time that he was among the hundreds of individuals sexually abused by Strauss. Becker said he first met Strauss as an Ohio State student in the mid-1980s seeking medical treatment for a rash he developed from cycling.

Becker said he was abused multiple times by Strauss during his visits to the student health clinic. He also said he felt violated by Strauss in the showers at Larkins Hall, the university’s former campus gymnasium. Strauss would often shower alongside students, according to multiple former Ohio State students and athletes.

Though he’d seen stories about Strauss in the news for years, Becker said he would often change the channel to avoid having to relive his experience. Becker was inspired to come forward after seeing recently retired Columbus Fire Chief Jeffrey Happ share that he too was a Strauss survivor.

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Bishop Ready alumni share abuse stories

Happ shared publicly on May 14 that Strauss first assaulted him when he was a 15-year-old multi-sport athlete at Bishop Ready. Strauss sexually abused Happ and his teammates during a body fat study conducted by Ohio State, the former fire chief said.

Todd Schroeck, a former Columbus firefighter who was present at the press conference, also experienced sexual abuse by Strauss as a Bishop Ready wrestler.

Schroeck said he was 17 years old when his wrestling team was selected to be part of Strauss’ body composition study. It was during a closed-door physical that Schroeck said he was fondled by Strauss.

“It’s time to be brave,” Schroeck said during the press conference. “Being a victim doesn’t have to define you.”

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Becker said he isn’t sure if he’s planning to join the lawsuits against Ohio State. He ultimately chose to come forward with his story because he hopes more survivors will feel empowered to speak out.

During his law enforcement career, Becker worked closely with victims of sexual abuse and domestic violence. Becker said very few men who were sexually abused by men come forward to report crimes.

“I can’t ask anyone to come forward if I wouldn’t do it myself,” Becker said.

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Union leaders speak on abuse

Steve Stein, president of Columbus Fire Fighters Union Local 67 of the International Association of Fire Fighters, began his remarks with an apology to the men standing beside him at the press conference.

“I heard about this stuff in the news, and I just assumed that justice was being served,” Stein said. “I just assumed that the victims were being heard, that they were being treated fairly… That assumption ends today.”

Stein said he knows that there are others out there who have been abused but haven’t shared their story.

“We all have your back,” he said, referring to the 1,700 Columbus firefighters and thousands of others statewide. “We all stand with you.”

Brian Steel, president of the Fraternal Order of Police Capital City Lodge 9, echoed Stein’s remarks.

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“The survivors of sexual abuse at Ohio State deserve to be heard, deserve to be respected, and they absolutely deserve to be supported,” Steel said. “What happened to them was a profound betrayal of trust at an institution that should have protected them.”

Steel said institutions like Ohio State “should never be above accountability, especially when innocent people are being involved.”

Higher education reporter Sheridan Hendrix can be reached at shendrix@dispatch.com and on Signal at @sheridan.120. You can follow her on Instagram at @sheridanwrites.



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