Springfield Police: No risk after second round of bomb threats

Clark State College's main campus at 570 E. Leffel Lane in Springfield on Feb. 10, 2026. JOSEPH COOKE/STAFF

Clark State College's main campus at 570 E. Leffel Lane in Springfield on Feb. 10, 2026. JOSEPH COOKE/STAFF

There is no existing threat following a second round of bomb threats in Springfield Tuesday, this time to Clark State College, Wittenberg University and the Clark County Department of Jobs and Family Services, according to the city of Springfield.

Threats were emailed to those locations and Springfield Police Division officers and other law enforcement found no substantiated threat, according to a media release. These threats followed bomb threats Monday to several downtown Springfield public offices and the Springfield City School District that referenced pipe bombs and said Haitian immigrants should be gone from the city, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said at a press conference Monday.

Clark State closed its main campus Tuesday after receiving an anonymous email suggesting a bomb threat on the Leffel Lane main campus, according to a college spokesperson.

Springfield City schools were dismissed early Monday following threats and law enforcement began daily sweeps of the 17 district buildings prior to and following school Tuesday.

“City and public safety officials will continue to monitor the situation closely and share updates as appropriate,” the city said in a release. “Thank you to our residents for their patience and cooperation, and to our public safety partners for their continued professionalism and swift response.”

An estimated 10,000 to 15,000 people from Haiti live in the Springfield area, and many are Temporary Protected Status holders. TPS was previously set to end after Feb. 3, but a judge paused that while a lawsuit challenging the move goes through the courts; the ruling postpones the end of TPS for Haiti indefinitely while the case proceeds.

The Trump administration on Friday filed an appeal in the case and on Tuesday the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it did not have immediate and specific plans to mobilize immigration officers to places with large Haitian populations.

But DHS Assistant Director for Field Operations Liana Castano said there have been daily ICE enforcement activities in locations including “but not limited to” Springfield and Florida.

DIG INTO OUR HAITIAN COVERAGE

Clark County Sheriff’s Office to ‘maintain the peace’ as TPS ends, will not enforce immigration laws

WATCH: Haitian restaurant in Springfield struggles as federal protections near expiration

• What’s coming?: After some initially warned of an anticipated 30-day ICE surge following the end of TPS, school and state officials stressed they have had no direct communication with the feds about potential enforcement actions, but they are preparing for the possibility.

• A community in fear: Reporter Cornelius Frolik traveled the streets of Springfield with a translator and spoke to more than a dozen Haitian people living and working in the Springfield area. Most of them expressed feelings of uncertainty and dread about the TPS cancellation.

• Lawsuits: Area Haitians on TPS are pinning their hopes on a couple of lawsuits that challenge the legality of the federal government’s decision to cancel the TPS designation for Haiti. Here are the details on those lawsuits, including one involving a Springfield man.

• Keket: Our reporters sat down with a local restaurant owner concerned that immigration enforcement fears could close her business. Her compelling personal story is captured in writing and video here.

• Residents prepare: More than 80 people took part in an educational event at Zion Hill Baptist Church in Springfield Thursday evening, learning about their rights and those of their neighbors regardless of immigration status.

• Law enforcement: Local law enforcement officials say they will work to “maintain the peace” amid any ICE surge, but they won’t enforce federal immigration law.

• City leaders: The Springfield City Commission unanimously passed a resolution asking federal immigration agents to follow local rules when conducting enforcement activities.

• Politicians react: Our statehouse reporter Avery Kreemer reached out to politicians who represent Dayton and Springfield at the state and national level about their views on ending TPS and an ICE surge. Read that story here.

• How we got here: We have been reporting on the growth of the Haitian population in Springfield and its effect on the community for years. This story from the archive explains why so many Haitians relocated to Springfield, Ohio.

• Community survey: In addition to reporters interviewing residents on the street, we created an online survey to gather community perspective. I’ll have a summary of responses in an upcoming story.

• Dayton action: Several Dayton restaurants and other businesses closed Friday and hundreds of people gathered in front of U.S. Rep. Mike Turner’s Dayton office as part of the nationwide protest of ICE operations.

• Springfield City Hall, school, county hit by threats tied to Haitian immigration concerns

• VIDEO:What to know about Haitian immigration in Spring

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