The Batwoman fallout from Ruby Rose's allegations of a toxic work environment continued with several members of the CW series refuting her allegations. The latest development comes from a former Batwoman crew member who called Rose a "dictator to work for" in a recent statement.

While Rose's departure from Batwoman first appeared to be amicable, the actor recently came forward with some rather explosive claims. However, after posting a series of photos to social media she said was an example of her treatment on Batwoman, several former castmates, Warner Bros. executives, and now a crew member claimed Rose was, in fact, the person who made the work environment so toxic.

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A production assistant named Alexander J. Baxter issued a statement to Comic Book Resources about Rose and her departure from Batwoman. Among the accusations he made was that the actor would give orders to crew members for the sake of giving orders. She was also someone who didn't seem to respect those who worked for the program. Baxter told one story about Rose where he was holding a door for her, adding he was finishing up a 15-hour shift on the set, when she came through the entrance and spilled her food. The production assistant claimed that after the actor spilled her food, she simply looked at him and said "well?” before "storming" off, leaving him to clean up the mess.

Ruby Rose Batwoman Departure

Baxter went on to say that Rose acted "like a dictator" to the point where he felt as though he might even want to quit the show and give up his dream of working in television. He added that it wasn't just that she was rude or gave orders to people just for the purpose of ordering them around. The woman who once said she might consider returning to Batwoman at some point was also a poor employee.

The then production assistant claimed that Rose was also someone who routinely showed up to set late. Her late arrivals made the crew work "countless" long days, often going into overtime. It was quite obvious that the actor often showed that she didn't have any interest in being there and that attitude led to her treating everyone involved rather poorly.

Baxter's comments might be the most scathing and in-depth about how hard it was to work with the Batwoman star, but he's certainly not alone. His story is just the latest entry into an ever-growing case of who was the real problem on the television show.

Batwoman airs on Wednesday at 9:00 p.m. on The CW.

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Source: Comic Book Resources