Body cam shows Cincinnati officer use racial slur while on duty; community activists concerned

Community activists are concerned after body and dashboard camera video captured a Cincinnati police officer using a racial slur while on duty earlier this year, our news partners at WCPO are reporting.

On April 5, Officer Rose Valentino, a 14-year CPD veteran, used the n-word in reference to a Black teen who she said flipped her off, according to an internal report, WCPO reported.

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“When you use a racial slur like that and you’re paid by taxpayers you know there’s no place for that in policing,” said NAACP President Joe Mallory.

Others were stunned as well.

“It’s extremely surprising,” activist Iris Roley told WCPO. “It’s surprising that this is where we are that people who are in a profession, and it’s not just police — anyone who works for the city has an opportunity to believe that they can use racial slurs.”

One of the architects behind the Cincinnati Collaborative Agreement, Roley said she found the way Valentino reacted to the teen sickening, WCPO reported.

“This should not be what we allow,” Roley told WCPO. “It should not be the standard of policing in the city of Cincinnati or the perception that this is acceptable. It is unacceptable.

Activist Tea’irea Powell said she was disturbed by the video, WCPO reported.

“This was a student, so like this is how you feel about a child, regardless of their race, you feel like this about a child, which says a lot about you and I think the tone of it all is just disgusting,” Powell said. “And watching the video, the one thing that stuck out to me was how she emphasized how she said, ‘I hate them.’”

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Mallory said he agreed the kind of “aggression and vitriol” Valentino used was disturbing, WCPO reported. He also noted it was worrisome how easily she said the word.

“We expect, we have an expectation as citizens that we have a bias-free police force and that they police fair and impartially and they treat everyone with dignity and respect,” Mallory said. “And I have some concern about this particular officer carrying a gun and a badge out on the street with the way she feels toward a specific race of people.”

He said the incident will further strain the relationship between the police and the community, WCPO reported.

“Something like this kind of deteriorates and tears that fabric of trust you know from the police side with the community and that there’s always that bit of mistrust but hearing that what she said that it just confirms for a lot of people that that’s the way some of them feel,” he said.

“It does damage; although this is one particular officer that’s saying this, unfortunately, it represents the whole police department,” Powell said.

They all said Valentino should be off the streets.

“There’s no room at all for her on the Cincinnati police force,” Powell said, WCPO reported. “I also think the community and police (need to) make sure that we continue to try and make those relationships because this did do a lot of damage.”

While police departments have implicit bias training, Mallory said he doesn’t know if people can train the bias out of someone’s heart, WCPO reported. Roley agreed.

“There is no training that can rid one of racist behavior... People see this as an offense and it’s a precursor to treatment,” Roley told WCPO. “If you can say that loud based on a flipping of a finger, so let’s just start with the action that got the reaction, then maybe you’re not suitable to be in that uniform and do that job.”

According to WCPO, Fraternal Order of Police President Dan Hils said in a statement “no Cincinnati Police Officer should use the N-word or any other racial slur and anyone who does is wrong.”

“The Fraternal Order of Police represents every Cincinnati Police Officer when they’re involved in the disciplinary process as outlined in our collective bargaining agreement,” Hils said. “Every officer is entitled to a fair hearing and that’s what we’ll ensure happens.”

Hils said Valentino will have a department-level hearing that will likely take place in the coming weeks. WCPO reported He said a CPD police captain will hear both sides and then write a recommendation to the interim police chief.

According to police department policy, if the chief wants Valentino suspended, demoted or fired, the city manager needs to sign off, WCPO reported.