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"I don't like this book because it don't got know pictures" Chief Rhorerer

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”
“It’s becoming a disturbingly familiar scene in America - mentally unstable cops”

The national epidemic of mentally unstable cops #8



Pawtucket cop remains held at ACI on rape accusations
By Amanda Milkovits
 
WARWICK, R.I. -- An ex-Pawtucket police officer remains held without bail on charges of raping and assaulting a girlfriend during an argument at his condominium in North Smithfield last November.
Stephen R. Ricco, 40, rubbed his forehead and shook his head at times as the 39-year-old woman testified during his bail hearing at Kent District Court on Monday afternoon.
The only thing that his lawyer and the prosecutor agreed on was that Ricco and his now ex-girlfriend got into a fight in the early hours of Nov. 28.
A young woman whose parents live in the neighboring condo told Judge Anthony Capraro that she heard a loud argument and a woman saying, "Don't touch me! Don't touch me!"
A property manager at the High Rocks mill building testified that she heard the couple arguing that morning, and that the woman asked her to call the police. But, she said, the woman left with Ricco before she could call.
(The Journal does not identify alleged victims of sexual assault.)
Ricco was arrested by North Smithfield police on Thanksgiving, hours after the woman reported being assaulted, and he's been held at the Adult Correctional Institutions since then. Ricco is charged with felony domestic violence charges of rape and strangling, as well as misdemeanor charges of domestic disorderly conduct and simple assault.
It was the second time in a year that Ricco had been accused of assaulting a woman, which Assistant Attorney General Maureen Keough pointed out as she asked for him to be held.
Ricco was suspended from the Pawtucket police force in February and later resigned after he was accused of assaulting a different girlfriend while on duty -- including drawing his service weapon and telling her to kill him. A charge of domestic assault was dismissed, and Ricco pleaded no contest to disorderly conduct.
Ricco also is married; his wife did not attend the hearing.
His lawyer, David Gentile of Providence, brought up Ricco's past police service and his wife as a reason to release him on low bail. Gentile said later that he believed Ricco had completed his anger management counseling from the case last February.
"He poses no threat to the public," Gentile said, adding that a no-contact order should be in effect.
Gentile attacked the credibility of Ricco's girlfriend, who said they had dated "on and off" for a year and a half.
She testified that she was afraid of Ricco that night, that he suddenly became angry and attacked her in his condo.
When asked repeatedly by Keough and Gentile about why she didn't call 911 or just leave when she had the opportunity, the woman admitted that she was afraid to get Ricco in trouble. His disorderly conduct charge had been filed only seven month earlier and would be destroyed if he stayed out of trouble.
And, she said, "I love him."
The woman testified that she'd met Ricco when he was a police officer, and he responded to a call at her home in Pawtucket.
They'd broken up eventually, but reconciled in the few days before Thanksgiving. The night before the holiday, he picked her up from her waitressing job and they went out to a tavern in North Smithfield and then a nearby Denny's. His mood changed, she said, and he began slamming the table -- enough to attract attention from other customers and employees.
She said she asked Ricco numerous times to take her home. Instead, she said, he punched her in the head as he drove her to his apartment, where they got into an argument that turned violent, she said. Ricco grabbed her around the neck, and she told him she couldn't breathe. When the neighbors banged on the walls, Ricco released her and shut off the lights, telling her not to answer the door.
The woman said she went into the upstairs bathroom and called Ricco's wife, who hung up on her.
The woman said that Ricco overheard the conversation and grabbed her again -- this time, holding her down in the bedroom, biting her face and raping her, the affidavit said.
The woman said she eventually persuaded Ricco to take her home. He told her not to call the police.
She said she showered and called police in Pawtucket, where she lives, who referred her to the North Smithfield police. Ricco was arrested later on Thanksgiving.
Ricco is held pending a bail review on March 27.