Rose Valentino
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Rose Valentino | |
---|---|
Born | 1982 Cincinnati[1] |
Occupation | Police officer |
Rose Valentino is a police officer from Cincinnatti, Ohio.[1]
In 2011 she was one of the four officers followed by the reality TV show Policewomen of Cincinnatti.[2]
in 2020 Fox News reported Valentino and her sister Carmen were arrested over a domestic dispute.[3] Her police powers were suspended, pending a review, and she was placed on administrative duties.
In July 2022 Valentino was suspended a second time when footage from her body-cam was released, and listeners could hear her utter a series of long racist rants.[4][5]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Meet the Policewomen: Rose Valentine, The Learning Channel. Retrieved on 2022-08-15. “She is a Cincinnati native who loves nothing more than putting bad guys behind bars and making the city safer for her young daughter, Lily, and fiance Matt.”
- ↑ TLC's "Police Women of Cincinnati" Crack Down on Crime in the Queen City. the Futon Critic (January 11, 2011). Retrieved on March 16, 2013.
- ↑ Jennifer Edwards Baker. Cincinnati police officer, sister arrested when argument at card game turns violent, Fox News, 2020-03-24. Retrieved on 2022-08-15. “Rose Valentino, 38, and her sister, Angela Hauger, 43, are accused of hitting each other with fists and repeatedly striking the hood of each other’s vehicles with an umbrella, according to criminal complaints filed in Butler County Area I Court.”
- ↑ Police: Cincinnati officer caught on body camera using racial slur, WLWT, 2022-07-28. Retrieved on 2022-08-15. “A Cincinnati police officer has had her police powers suspended after her body camera caught her saying a racial slur while stuck in traffic on duty in April.”
- ↑ David Propper. Cincinnati cop, ex-reality TV star, caught on bodycam using N-word, New York Post, 2022-07-26. Retrieved on 2022-08-15. “WLWT 5 reported that Valentino, a member of the force since 2008, was driving in a police car to a stationhouse on April 5 and she got stuck behind a line of cars waiting to pick up students outside Western Hills University High School. When she activated her lights to get cars to move and they didn’t, she became agitated, the internal review reportedly states.”