“ Holly’s Act ‘aims to end the rotating justice of the door after the brutal attack of the woman

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Senator Bernie MorenoR -Ohio, presents “Holly’s Act” after a woman was violently attacked by a crowd in Cincinnati at the end of last month – a decision aimed at ending what he calls the rotating door of the judicial system for recurrences.
The attack occurred around 3 am on July 26 at the intersection of the Fourth and ELM streets in the central business district of Cincinnati.
The spectator’s video captured when a large group shot several people early that morning, and in a video obtained by Fox News Digital, an unidentified man could be heard screaming racial insults while being beaten in the street. Other images seem to show the male victim hitting a member of the group shortly before the altercation improves.
In another video, a woman later identified himself as “Holly” tried to intervene before she was slammed on the ground and crushed.
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A new video of the viral beat from Cincinnati shows individuals who scream racial insults as the violence takes place. (Jay Black)
Only one call to 911 occurred several minutes after the incident, despite more than 100 people who stood on foot, recording or participating in the fray.
Moreno held a press conference in Cincinnati on Wednesday after meeting city officials, the special agent of the FBI responsible, the future American lawyer, the police chief and a deputy for the local sheriff department.
Moreno described the meeting as starting “a little harsh”, but said that she had ended in a productive way.
In the end, he said that everyone at the table had agreed to work together to make sure that what happened on July 26 will not happen again. He also said he wanted to make sure that anyone who lives in Ohio can visit one of the state’s cities.
Viral cincinnati defeating victim forced to a super secret point ” with security

Senator Bernie Moreno talks about a press conference alongside Holly, a victim of the viral on July 26 who beats in Cincinnati, at the siege of the fraternal police order in Ohio on Wednesday, August 6, 2025. (Julia Bonavita / Fox News Digital)
“We are going to talk to some of our state legislators to see if we can put something in place that I call – with its permission -” Holly’s Act “, this is how we lift the minimum sentence bar, minimum deposit requirements … We will end the rotating door of injustice,” said Moreno.
“Our judges can no longer hide behind their cape, and they must be responsible for not respecting the law and the order,” he added.
Officials of law enforcement risk their lives every day to stop criminals, which involves going out and making difficult arrests. But when these criminals appear in court, the judges undermine the efforts of the police by “giving criminals a slap,” said the senator.
“Let’s be honest, because you often qualify like a fight,” Moreno told journalists. “It was tempted by the murder of an innocent woman. And that person had a rap sheet a mile long.
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Holly, victim of the viral fight of July 26 in Cincinnati, listened to Senator Bernie Moreno during a press conference at the siege of the fraternal police order in Ohio on Wednesday, August 6, 2025. (Julia Bonavita / Fox News Digital)
Holly was standing next to Moreno, who said she was focused on the reform – did not relieve trauma.
“I am here to talk about the future and how we can change it; how we can prevent it from happening to anyone,” she said. “These odious crimes must stop. You know, I never want it to happen to someone else, especially a mother, a girl or someone who is loved.”
Holly said that to move forward, more police are necessary, as is the justice reform that prohibits judges from letting people get out of care with a wrist slap.
“The man who attacked me and could have damaged me constantly forever, should never have been on the street, never,” she said. “The fact that he had just released prison before for something he should have been there for years. It is really sad for me because I cannot even understand how many other people who have been attacked by the same type of man again and again in Toledo, Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton.”
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Holly, victim of the viral fight of July 26 in Cincinnati, listened to Senator Bernie Moreno during a press conference at the siege of the fraternal police order in Ohio on Wednesday, August 6, 2025. (Julia Bonavita / Fox News Digital)
Holly said that what upsets her most is the desensitization of the public to violence.
Holly said that she hoped that one day, there is a kind of invoice that allows someone to be prosecuted or sentenced to a fine if he does not call 911 first to save someone’s life.
“We all have to help each other and start helping humanity,” she said.
A journalist asked Holly if she felt like she was going to die that night.
“I really felt like I was going to die,” said Holly. “I’m still shocked that I haven’t done it – and my doctors too.”
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Senator Bernie Moreno talks about viral blows in Cincinnati, at the siege of the fraternal police order in Ohio on Wednesday, August 6, 2025. (Julia Bonavita / Fox News Digital)
Moreno told journalists that at the meeting, the participants spoke of the supply of signature premiums to the police in order to call on more staff.
He said that in the end, better police presence and better technology will help prevent incidents like this from July 26.
But Moreno also stressed how extremely important it is for civilians to call the authorities so that the aid can be provided as soon as possible.
“We are not people who watch a woman get beaten with her life and our first instinct is to go out and film something so that you can be cool on Instagram,” he said. “It is not who we are.”

A woman was violently struck in Cincinnati. (X / @ anthea06274890)
Several people have been charged as the police described as “a violent attack”, notably Dominique Kittle, Montianez Merriweather, Jermaine Matthews, Dekyra Vernon, Aisha Devaugh and Patrick Rosemond.
Rosemond, 38, was arrested on Monday afternoon by the FBI and the work group of the Atlanta Metropolitan Metropolitan offender in the county of Fulton, in Georgia. He is accused of two chiefs of criminal assault and aggravated riot, according to the Cincinnati police department.
He is also accused of a chief of fugitive of justice for a digital accusation, according to the Sheriff’s office of the County of Fulton.
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He is currently detained in Fulton County prison while waiting for extradition to Ohio, police said. Rosemond is a Cincinnati resident and has no address recorded in Georgia, according to files obtained by Fox News Digital.
A large jury should meet on August 8 for the charges deposited against Kittle, Vernon, Matthews and Merriweather.