An incredible fight broke out in a pub in Georgia on USAwhere a man tried to enter the store wearing an SS officer’s uniform, causing them to try to chase him away.
A girl inside the US pub recognized the Nazi uniform and tried to get the man out of the pub. Another woman tries to remove the swastika armband from the 33-year-old’s hand and he then hits her on the head with a beer glass, sparking a fierce fight.
The incident took place on Thursday night (23.10.2025) when the man got into a confrontation with pub customers and remained outside Cutters Pub in the US.
The woman suffered a broken nose and the perpetrator was arrested for assault and battery.
“We are appalled by the actions of an individual who, while in downtown Athens wearing a Nazi uniform, assaulted a University of Georgia student,” the University of Georgia said in a statement.
“The man is not a student and has nothing to do with the University. His actions, which were captured on video, are appalling and we are grateful to the Athens-Clarke County police officers who arrested him and took him into custody,” the statement said.
From what I have heard this brave young man was arrested. I would like to try to help him if I can find any contact info. we should help him as a community. pic.twitter.com/f5LFcMY7tB
— Paul miller (@jokerwaffenfren) October 25, 2025
The student who was attacked, 23-year-old Grace Lang, identified the attacker, saying she knew him through a friend of a friend and that he is known in her circles and in the city. Lang said two of her friends, one of whom is Jewish, confronted the man first.
“She was basically telling him to leave and go home,” Lang said.
Video from the moment of the fight shows the man walking with the beer glass in hand and swinging it at a woman, hitting her in the face as she falls. “He was just very proud of himself for what he was wearing,” said Lang, who said she received four stitches for the cuts on her face.
Athens-Clarke County Jail records showed the 33-year-old was taken into custody early Friday. Born in 1992, he was taken into custody on suspicion of two counts of simple assault and one count of aggravated assault.
Jail records did not indicate whether the 33-year-old had hired or had an attorney appointed to represent him, and he remained in custody Sunday.
The university called the uniformed man’s act “appalling anti-Semitic behavior” and advised students who witnessed it that they can reach out to counselors through the university.