The Springfield woman who spread the immigrants eating cats rumor now regrets it

A snowballing mistake
Reaching the presidential debate
 Fueled a Harris punch
Not the first time
Online misinformation
A baseless publication
Butchered cat
Local authorities
Screenshot
Vance tweets
Fear for herself and her daughter
The suffering of the Haitian community
Haitian immigration
Revitalizing the community
Growing tensions
More myths
Long history
From beans and garlic to pets
A snowballing mistake

Erika Lee, the Springfield, Ohio, resident who first posted the false rumor about Haitian immigrants eating cats, says she regrets her publication, which snowballed into the national political agenda.

Reaching the presidential debate

Donald Trump replicated the false statement during the ABC News debate, which caught the attention of the internet. Songs, jokes, memes, and hate speech have grown around humor.

Fueled a Harris punch

The idea prompted Kamala Harris to laugh and claim that those "extreme" lies are the reason 200 former Republican officials have endorsed her in an open letter. Despite that, the former President repeated the lie.

Not the first time

It was not the first time that the Trump campaign amplified the lie. His running mate amplified it hours before the debate, and a press release echoed his statement.

Online misinformation

According to the NY Times, the myth stemmed from a Facebook post by Ms. Lee. Although it was a baseless claim, it still took the internet by storm and was amplified instantly by conservatives online.

A baseless publication

According to People magazine's interview with Ms. Lee, the rumor started in a conversation between neighbors. After that, she posted it on a local crime Facebook page.

Butchered cat

Ms. Lee wrote that the cat of a neighboring girl had gone missing and was then found outside the house of a Haitian family, butchered and hanging upside down.

Local authorities

According to several news outlets, Springfield's local police have clarified that they have not received any report of anyone eating a pet. Still, the rumor is part of a larger effort.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

Screenshot

When she realized the statement was baseless, Ms. Lee deleted the post. However, another user published a screenshot in X, and it grew quickly.

Vance tweets

The NY Times said JD Vance retweeted the post, saying, "It's coming to your city next." Mr. Vance has attacked the growing community of Haitian immigrants in Springfield many times in the past months.

Fear for herself and her daughter

The tension has grown inside the community for months, and the rumor has only worsened things. Ms. Lee told People she pulled her daughter from school over fears for her safety.

The suffering of the Haitian community

She also told the NY Times she regrets the publication and added to People that if she were Haitian, she would also be scared, given the hostility of the community after the rumor grew.

Haitian immigration

Haitian immigration has grown in the US as the country is crippled with gang violence. The growth in job opportunities attracted the community to Springfield. Local authorities estimate that around 20,000 have arrived.

Revitalizing the community

While the immigrants helped revitalize a once-dying community by taking blue-collar jobs in factories struggling to find workers, they also pressured housing and schools, the NY Times said.

Growing tensions

The tensions had been growing for months but reached their peak last year when an immigrant driver was involved in a fatal school bus crash. Mr. Vance has dipped into the local anxiety.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

More myths

He has accused the immigrants of "draining social services" and "generally causing chaos." He also said they were there illegally in the country, which is false.

Long history

However, despite the targeted attacks on the Springfield Haitian community, this is far from the first time people have spread the myth that immigrants eat pets or used their eating habits to discriminate against them.

From beans and garlic to pets

According to NPR, Italians were once labeled as "garlic eaters," and people have long used beans to create a slur against Mexicans. The pet myth is also an old one, used to discriminate against Asian immigrants.

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