Facebook post The rumor that Haitian immigrants ate a pet cat in Springfield began in early September 2024 with a
Facebook post to a private group called "Springfield Ohio Crime and Information", and that post was later re-posted elsewhere. The post said: Warning to all about our beloved pets & those around us!! My neighbor informed me that her daughter’s friend had lost her cat. She checked pages, kennels, asked around, etc. One day she came home from work, as soon as she stepped out of her car, looked towards a neighbors house, where Haitians live, & saw her cat hanging from a branch, like you'd do a deer for butchering, & they were carving it up to eat. I've been told they are doing this to dogs, they have been doing it at snyder park with the ducks & geese, as I was told that last bit by Rangers & police. Please keep a close eye. The author of the Facebook post later deleted it and expressed regret that the story fueled
conspiracy theories. The neighbor who initially relayed the story to the poster said that she was not "the most credible source", and clarified that it was not her daughter's friend but just a rumor she heard from a friend's acquaintance. In July, a user posted a photo to
Reddit of a man carrying a dead
Canada goose on the street in
Columbus, Ohio. The goose was
roadkill, there was no evidence that the man intended to eat it, and there was never any evidence the man was Haitian or an immigrant. More than a month after the Reddit post, right-wing sites and influencers publicized the photo, claiming it shows a Haitian immigrant stealing geese in Springfield. The
Ohio Department of Natural Resources was inundated with phone calls from people who believed the misinformation, and it became associated with the larger pet-eating hoax. Police
body camera footage of the arrest was posted to social media and falsely labeled as an arrest in Springfield. Like the Columbus man, the Canton woman had no connection to Haiti or Springfield. On August 26,
Clark County law enforcement dispatchers received a call from someone who said they saw Haitians carrying geese near a Springfield bike trail, but police found no evidence. Clark County Commission president Melanie Flax Wilt characterized the episode as a "literal wild goose chase", and Clark County officials said no other calls regarding stolen animals had been received in the last 11 months. The following day, a Springfield resident commented at a city commission meeting, without evidence, that immigrants were "in the park grabbing up ducks by their neck and cutting their head off ... and eating them". The only confirmed report of someone illegally hunting geese in Springfield was a 64-year-old
white man, who was arrested on September 10 and charged with illegally hunting Canada geese at a golf course with a shotgun; he later pled guilty to hunting without a permit.
Official response Springfield's police department issued a statement that said "there have been no credible reports or specific claims of pets being harmed, injured or abused by individuals within the immigrant community". Springfield mayor
Rob Rue said that there was no evidence to support claims that
geese or
ducks from parks were being killed and eaten. City manager Bryan Heck called the rumors "
disinformation". Ohio governor
Mike DeWine, a Republican, rebuked the rumors, saying, "This is a piece of garbage that is simply not true. There's no evidence of this at all." He also emphasized that these "people are here legally."
Amplification by Republican politicians and right-wing influencers The initial claims based on the Facebook post went viral among American far-right, neo-Nazi groups, and popular right-wing
Twitter accounts which presented the claims as fact. Captive Dreamer, an account followed by Vance and Musk and described by
The Daily Dot as "one of the most popular accounts posting white nationalist content on X", took credit for its spread. According to the Media Forensics Hub at
Clemson University, the first viral content was a
tweet posted on September 6 by the account End Wokeness (linked to
alt-right commentator and conspiracy theorist
Jack Posobiec), which was viewed millions of times and included a screenshot of the Facebook post, a screenshot of the Reddit photo of the man with the goose, and text linking disappearing "ducks and pets" to 20,000 Haitians "shipped to" Springfield. On September 9,
JD Vance, a
U.S. senator from Ohio and the
2024 Republican nominee for vice president, spread the claim in a tweet while referencing his July 2024 press release, writing: "Months ago, I raised the issue of Haitian illegal immigrants draining social services and generally causing chaos all over Springfield, Ohio. Reports now show that people have had their pets abducted and eaten by people who shouldn't be in this country." One of Vance's staffers had asked Springfield's city manager Brian Heck about the claim; Heck recalled, "I told him no. There was no verifiable evidence or reports to show this was true. I told them these claims were baseless." Vance responded to criticism of his post on September 10, writing: "In the last several weeks, my office has received many inquiries from actual residents of Springfield who've said their neighbors' pets or local wildlife were abducted by Haitian migrants. It's possible, of course, that all of these rumors will turn out to be false." He also encouraged supporters to continue posting and "keep the cat
memes flowing". Right-wing influencers used Twitter to spread the claims and related memes, with
Laura Loomer posting about "20,000
cannibalistic Haitians" eating cats and dogs in Springfield and Texas senator
Ted Cruz sharing a widely criticized meme showing two cats with the caption "Please vote for Trump, so Haitian immigrants don't eat us". The
Arizona Republican Party purchased twelve roadside
billboards in the
Phoenix metro area stating "Eat less kittens, Vote Republican!", spoofing
Chick-Fil-A's
"Eat Mor Chikin" advertising campaign. Following his running mate's promotion of this rumor, it was elevated further by Republican presidential nominee
Donald Trump. During the
Harris–Trump presidential debate on September 10, Trump claimed that: "In Springfield, they're eating the dogs, the people that came in, they're eating the cats. They're eating, they’re eating the pets of the people that live there. And this is what's happening in our country, and it's a shame." Harris started laughing as Trump was making those statements. After Trump concluded his statements, the moderator of the debate,
David Muir, stated that
ABC News reached out to the city manager, whose spokesperson said: "There have been no credible reports of specific claims of pets being harmed, injured or abused by individuals within the immigrant community". Despite many news outlets debunking or criticizing the claims after the debate, they continued to spread and expand. Loomer accused Haitian immigrants of eating humans, while sharing a video captioned "Cannibalism in Haiti".
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, herself the daughter of Haitian immigrants, responded to the comments, stating that "no leader should ever associate with someone who spreads this kind of ugliness, this kind of racist poison." Trump began repeating the debunked claim that Haitians were walking off with pet geese from the parks and lakes in Springfield. According to a poll conducted by
YouGov between 12 and September 13, 52% of Trump supporters said that the claim is "definitely" or "probably" true, 24% said they're "not sure" if it's true, and 25% said it's "probably" or "definitely" false.
Continued spread , the Republican candidate for senate in Ohio, likewise called for deportation and for their temporary protected status to be terminated. Representative
Clay Higgins repeated the hoax, calling Haitian immigrants "thugs", "slapstick gangsters" and insisting that they leave the U.S. He further called Haiti "the nastiest country in the western hemisphere". Despite Haitians being in the country legally, Vance said that he was "still going to call them an illegal alien" because he objected to the law that gave them legal status, incorrectly claiming that their legal status came from an illegal act by presidential candidate
Kamala Harris. Trump has likewise called them "illegal immigrants," claiming that 30,000 were "dropped" into Springfield, and that Haitian migrants in Springfield have weapons "beyond even military scope". When the former president announced he would visit Springfield and
Aurora in late September, both Governor DeWine and Mayor Rue advised against the visit, citing strained resources. Vance continued to amplify and expand the claims, posting multiple pieces of misleading evidence in support. He shared a dated video of cats roaming where skinned animals were being grilled in Dayton, Ohio, which was refuted by both the Dayton police and its mayor, while social media users responded that it appeared to just be chicken. A Vance aide gave
The Wall Street Journal a police report from a Springfield resident who said that her pet cat was missing, casting suspicion on her Haitian neighbors. But when reporters checked with the woman, she said that the missing cat, Sassy, was hiding in her basement and she had apologized to her neighbors. In a September 15 interview, Vance again defended the claims, saying they were "the first-hand accounts of my constituents", while also acknowledging that they were false, calling them a meme: "The American media totally ignored this stuff until Donald Trump and I started talking about cat memes. If I have to create stories so that the American media actually pays attention to the suffering of the American people, then that's what I'm going to do." Elsewhere, Vance falsely suggested that Springfield's immigrants had caused "a massive rise in communicable diseases". During the
2024 vice presidential debate,
Tim Walz accused Vance of vilifying legal Haitian migrants, while Vance blamed the town's situation on "Kamala Harris's open border". When the moderators ended the section by clarifying the Haitian population of Springfield were legal immigrants, Vance objected, saying that fact-checking was against the agreed upon rules. == Subsequent violence and threats ==