39 Arrested, 65 Vehicles Towed After Planned Cincinnati Street Takeover Foiled

Police disrupted multiple planned street takeover events across the city, leading to dozens of arrests and vehicle confiscations.

Mar. 15, 2026 at 4:53pm

The Cincinnati Police Department says they arrested 39 people and towed 65 vehicles after disrupting a planned street takeover plot that involved multiple locations across the city. Police first responded to the initial planned takeover site in Roselawn, then followed the group as they moved to other areas, ultimately making the majority of arrests at a high school parking lot.

Why it matters

Street takeovers have become an increasing problem in many cities, leading to reckless driving, property damage, and public safety concerns. The coordinated police response in Cincinnati demonstrates how law enforcement is working to proactively address these organized events before they can occur.

The details

According to police, they received intelligence about a planned street takeover event in the Roselawn neighborhood near the intersection of Paddock Road and I-75. When officers arrived, they observed disorderly driving and made one arrest on site, while many other drivers fled. The group then traveled to an area near the Riverfront Live venue, where police again disrupted their activities. The group then moved to a high school parking lot in Roselawn, where the majority of the 39 arrests took place. Police have not yet identified the arrestees or specified the charges they may face.

  • In the early hours of Sunday morning, March 15, 2026, police received reports of a planned street takeover event in Roselawn.
  • Police first responded to the initial planned takeover site in Roselawn around 2 a.m. on March 15, 2026.
  • The group then traveled to an area near the Riverfront Live venue, where police again disrupted their activities around 3 a.m. on March 15, 2026.
  • The group then moved to a high school parking lot in Roselawn, where the majority of the 39 arrests occurred around 4 a.m. on March 15, 2026.

The players

Cincinnati Police Department

The local law enforcement agency that coordinated the response and made the arrests.

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What’s next

The incident remains under investigation by Cincinnati police, who have not yet released the identities or charges of the 39 individuals arrested.

The takeaway

This incident highlights the growing problem of organized street takeovers in cities and the need for proactive law enforcement coordination to disrupt these dangerous events before they can occur and threaten public safety.