Nursery worker convicted of abusing 21 babies

Lecka admitted seven counts of cruelty and was found guilty of another 14
A 22-year-old nursery worker has been convicted of abusing 21 babies, including kicking one little boy in the face and stepping on his shoulder.

Roksana Lecka, from Hounslow, west London, admitted seven counts of cruelty to a person under the age of 16 and was found guilty of another 14 by a jury at Kingston Crown Court, the Metropolitan Police said.

Her crimes were discovered in June last year after she was sent home for pinching a number of children and appearing โ€œflusteredโ€ at the Riverside Nursery in Twickenham, south-west London, the Crown Prosecution Service said.

Solicitor Jemma Till from Irwin Mitchell said the families involved had been โ€œtraumatisedโ€.

Lecka will be sentenced at Kingston Crown Court on 26 September.

Detectives from the Met Police went through CCTV from the nursery that showed her pinching and scratching children under their clothes on their arms, legs and stomachs.

The court heard how one child was repeatedly kicked in the face by Lecka, who also punched another baby after dragging her from a cot at the nursery.
She pinched several children dozens of times in the course of one day, causing them to cry and flinch away from her, the CPS said.

On one occasion she kicked a little boy in the face several times. She was also seen to push babies head first over cots and cover a toddlerโ€™s mouth when he started to cry.

Police said she had abused children at two nurseries between October 2023 and June 2024 โ€“ one of the counts related to Little Munchkins in Hounslow, with the remainder linked to the Riverside Nursery in Twickenham, which has since closed.

Det Sgt Geoff Boye said: โ€œFootage showed Lecka carrying out multiple assaults on the children in her care which included repeatedly pinching and grabbing children, dropping babies into their cots and on one occasion, she delivered several kicks to a young boy to the face and stepped on his shoulder.โ€

A screengrab from police footage of Leckaโ€™s arrest.
โ€˜Exceptional crueltyโ€™
Lecka told police she smoked cannabis before her shifts, and at one point was seen vaping a metre away from a young baby.

Det Insp Sian Hutchings said: โ€œThese families left their children in Leckaโ€™s care, trusting her to protect their children as well as the other staff at the nurseries clearly did.

โ€œThe footage of her offences against defenceless children was disturbing.

โ€œI would like to praise the strength of the victimsโ€™ families who have had to sit in court and watch footage of the abuse which Lecka inflicted on their children.โ€

Lecka worked at Riverside Nursery between January and June 2024, with a number of parents reporting unusual injuries and bruising in March and May that year.

Senior crown prosecutor Gemma Burns said Lecka had โ€œshown exceptional crueltyโ€ to the babies.

โ€œNo parent should have to fear leaving their child in the care of professionals, but the sheer scale of her abuse is staggering,โ€ she added.

Screengrab, from CCTV footage issued by the Metropolitan Police, of Roskana Lecka during a police interview.
โ€˜Urgent reformsโ€™
Munira Wilson, the Liberal Democrat MP for Twickenham, said it was โ€œincredibly important that families see justice done and the children get all the support they need to recover from this traumaโ€.

She claimed there was a need for โ€œurgent reforms to make nurseries and early years settings safe for our childrenโ€.

โ€œNurseries must be subject to no-notice Ofsted inspections where safeguarding concerns can be raised and CCTV footage is reviewed. I will be working with colleagues to make sure these tragedies never happen again โ€“ every parent should know their child is safe when left at nursery,โ€ the MP added.

A spokesperson for Riverside Nurseries said: โ€œSituations like this are deeply upsetting and represent a profound breach of trust in a professional. We recognise how difficult this has been, in particular for the children and families directly involved.

โ€œCreating places in which children are happy, safe and able to thrive is our top priority, and we will do everything in our power to protect that.โ€

The firm said that since last summer Ofsted had inspected all its nurseries and found their safeguarding arrangements to be โ€œeffectiveโ€.


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