Didn’t Like Being Told To Stop Watching Racist TikTok Video… Then Had Issue At Delray Medical Center.

DELRAY BEACH, FL (BocaNewsNow.com) (Copyright © 2025 MetroDesk Media, LLC) — A Delray Beach woman is facing a felony charge of aggravated battery after she allegedly attacked her boyfriend with a metal golf putter, according to a police report. Bridget Margaret Rosacker, 62, of the 20 block of NW 16th Street, was also charged with resisting an officer without violence. She was arrested on October 31 and booked into the Palm Beach County Jail.
Delray Beach police responded to a non-emergency call from a man who reported his girlfriend, Rosacker, was intoxicated and had been awake for several days. According to the affidavit, the victim told police an argument began over a TikTok show Rosacker was watching. He stated that Rosacker then grabbed a metal golf putter and struck him four to five times, swinging it “akin to a baseball bat.”
Officers arriving at the scene observed the victim with “persistent bleeding” from his left arm, swelling and bruising under his left eye, and several lacerations on his forearm, wrist, and hand. The victim fled the home to call for help.

Police say they found Rosacker inside the residence in an “intoxicated state” and exhibiting an “altered mental status,” making it difficult for her to answer questions. Rosacker claimed the argument started when the victim became upset about a TikTok show she was watching, threw her phone, and used racial slurs. She alleged the victim grabbed her arm, though officers noted no visible injuries on her. Rosacker reportedly admitted to holding the putter and warning the victim to stay away.
The resisting charge was added after Rosacker was transported to Delray Medical Center for clearance. While at the hospital, police allege Rosacker “sprang up and checked herself into” an officer, then grabbed the officer’s duty belt and pulled on it, prompting the officer to escort her to the floor. The report also notes she “engaged in profanity directed at law enforcement officers and hospital staff.”

