
Cannabis-smoking Montessori nursery worker is emotionless as she is shown injuries she inflicted on babies in her care at £1,900-a-month day care - as she is found guilty
Chilling video footage captured the moment a Polish nursery worker sat expressionless as she was shown the injuries she inflicted on 21 babies in her care at a Montessori day care centre.
Roksana Lecka was today found guilty of abusing toddlers at the £1,900-a-month Riverside Nursery in Twickenham, south-west London.
During a harrowing campaign of abuse the cannabis-smoking 22-year-old kicked one little boy in the face, stepped on his shoulder, and punched a baby after dragging her out of a cot.
Concerned parents first began photographing and reporting unexplained injuries on their children's tiny bodies as early as March last year.
They watched in horror in court as jurors were shown Lecka's sadistic attacks, including CCTV footage of her kicking the boy repeatedly in the face.
She admitted seven counts of child cruelty - but insisted throughout her trial that she was sleep deprived from smoking cannabis all night with her boyfriend. Lecka denied 17 other charges but a jury at Kingston Crown Court unanimously found her guilty.
CCTV footage of Lecka in custody shows her devoid of emotion as officers show her images of the injuries she inflicted on babies. The interviewer asks if she has any idea about the injuries and how they were caused, to which she repeatedly replies: 'No comment'.
Even when asked how seeing pictures of the infants made her feel, the nursery worker fiddled with her hair and refused to comment.
In another video of her arrest on July 5 last year on police body cam, Lecka smirks as officers tell her she is going to be arrested on allegations of her assaulting children.
'I've heard about that, yeah', she says as she nods her head.
Parents wept in the public gallery as the verdicts were read out today, while Lecka was also tearful as she was led away to the cells.
Staff noticed the children had been scratched and bruised and Lecka was suspended on June 28, 2024.
After watching hours of CCTV and reviewing evidence compiled by parents, Lecka was charged with 24 counts of child cruelty.
She admitted seven of the charges against her but denied a further 17.
Today after nine hours and 53 minutes, jurors convicted her of 14 of the remaining 17 child cruelty counts and acquitted her of three.
She was remanded in custody and will be sentenced at Kingston Crown Court on September 26.
Judge Sarah Plaschkes KC exempted the jury from future service for the next 10 years.
There were gasps from jurors and weeping parents in the public gallery as horrifying footage of Lecka's attacks on toddlers, who were left writhing in agony, was shown during her trial.
They saw horrifying CCTV footage of Lecka kicking a boy in the face four times before stepping on his shoulder. The trainers she was wearing were later seized by police.
In further footage played to the court, Lecka can also be seen pinching the legs, back and underarm of a young girl who is crying from the pain.
There were also clips of her pinching the side of a girl's face and grabbing her hair.
She is seen vaping in another clip before grabbing a baby out of a crib and pinching and punching the baby.
Lecka was 'looking around' at other members of staff to see who was 'watching these assaults occur', the court heard.
But the 22-year-old, who moved to Britain from Katowice in southern Poland when she was three, explained away each sickening act of violence with a chilling nonchalance.
She had told the jury: 'I can't remember the things I was doing because I was smoking cannabis that was affecting my memory.'
Giving evidence in a smart black suit jacket over a black top, her blonde hair tied back in a neat ponytail, she claimed that an alleged pinch to a boy's stomach was simply a tender hug.
A rough yank on a boy's hair was a 'ruffle with my fingers.'
A series of violent jabs to another toddler's stomach that left his abdomen black and blue were just 'playful pokes to the side,' she insisted.
A baby Lecka smacked twice around the face while puffing on her vape was actually only crying because 'she was distressed having just woken up from a nap'.
And a sickening moment when she threw a girl onto a mat had merely been some 'rough handling,' she declared.
The former beauty worker changed several pleas to guilty just before her trial begun, having been shown enhanced CCTV that irrefutably illustrated her crimes.
She desperately sought to rationalise her behaviour with a series of pathetic excuses, including that she would get 'moody' if she could not smoke her vape at work, did not have enough sleep, was still feeling the effects of cannabis smoked the night before and had been suffering from period cramps.
'At that time I was really addicted to vapes, I would smoke two little crystal disposables a day,' she told the court.
'I was vaping in nursery. Because if I did not smoke I would get agitated and fed up. I couldn't keep asking to go to the toilet. Any opportunity I would take. I would be really moody and fed up.
'It would be a couple of puffs and then I'd put it away… I would put it in my bra.'
In the week of her suspension, Lecka claimed she had been 'over-prioritising' her boyfriend. 'I was with my boyfriend every night. I was addicted to him,' she said.
In her prepared statement, Lecka denied assaulting any children at the Riverside Nursery.
When asked in court if it was a lie, she said: 'I was not lying because I was unaware of what I was doing and the things I was doing, I can't remember the things I was doing because I was smoking cannabis that was affecting my memory.'
She added: 'The amount of cannabis I was smoking was still affecting me, in that period of time.'
Prosecutor Tracy Ayling told jurors that smoking cannabis and not being able to vape were 'excuses'.
She added: 'It is clear her actions are deliberate or at the very least careless, but on most occasions we say deliberate.
'There are, of course, some clips where Ms Lecka - as we put it - keeps going back for more.'
Her own evidence was damning of the chaotic environment at Riverside Nursery, part of a prestigious group of educational institutions run by Dukes Education.
Lecka admitted she hadn't bothered to complete her online safeguarding modules, and staff turnover was so high that workers were constantly training others while on the job.
She said she would frequently take toilet breaks to smoke a vape she kept in her bra, which she was seen on CCTV smoking next to children, and would take cannabis with her boyfriend – sometimes before work.
Despite this she was praised by management as a model employee and recalled: 'They had experience with people my age or younger who wouldn't stick to the job or do it properly but [head teacher] Noor one day called me into her office and said I was doing really well, she's really proud of me.
'She had even bought me pink roses.
'She said if I continued to do so well she would sort it for me to do Level 3 childcare courses if it was something I wanted.'
That she was held in such high esteem goes some way to explain why staff were for so long unable to link her to the horrific injuries suffered by children in their care – injuries that for months were explained away to parents as innocuous accidents.
As consultant paediatrician Dr Stephen Rose told the trial, they should have recognised that wounds including bruised earlobes, torsos and thighs must have been caused deliberately.
'Ears do not get injured or bruised accidentally…if it is a bruise it was caused non-accidentally or deliberately inflicted,' he said.
'The side of the torso is relatively protected by the arm, so it is not an area that is bruised accidentally.'
Dr Rose added that marks on a child's thigh had likely been caused on purpose because toddlers who fall backwards land on their bottoms, not their thighs.
Lecka, who has two younger siblings, was supported throughout the trial by her mother.
The Polish national, who studied beauty at Kingston College and worked as a babysitter, barmaid and at a laser removal clinic before getting her job at the nursery, will be sentenced at a later date.
A spokesman from Riverside Nurseries said: 'This has been a distressing case, particularly for the children and families directly affected. Our thoughts are first and foremost with those families.
'Following concerns raised by Riverside Nursery staff, the individual was suspended and ultimately charged with offences against a number of children at the Nursery. Although Roksana Lecka was not convicted on all charges, today's verdict confirms the seriousness of those concerns.
'Situations 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.
'Creating 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.'
Gemma Burns, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said: 'Lecka repeatedly showed exceptional cruelty in her appalling treatment of these babies.
'No parent should have to fear leaving their child in the care of professionals, but the sheer scale of her abuse is staggering.
'The CPS put forward compelling evidence that clearly showed her targeting children when colleagues were either out of the room, or had their backs turned.
'We also called on experts to prove that the injuries Lecka's victims sustained were consistent with pinch marks.
'Lecka was placed in a position of trust and her job required her to provide safety and protection. Instead, she kicked, scratched, and pinched these young children, with this vile abuse of vulnerable victims continuing for many months.'
Lecka will be sentenced on September 26.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Metro
an hour ago
- Metro
'Teen boy shoots dead three at carnival including infant and injures two others'
A teenage boy allegedly shot five people at a carnival and killed three of them including an eight-month-old infant. The teen is accused of opening fire as two groups got into a fight at the WestFest carnival at Centennial Park in a suburb of Salt Lake City, Utah. Police officers working at the carnival saw the two groups get into a verbal altercation on Sunday night. 'As they approached to break up the altercation, a 16-year-old male from one of the groups pulled out a gun and fired,' wrote the West Valley City Police Department on X (formerly Twitter). An officer fired and did not hit the suspect, who was taken into custody. More Trending The teen allegedly killed Hassan Lugundi, 18, who was believed to be his target; Fnu Reena, 41; and the infant whose identity was not immediately released. West Valley City Mayor Karen Lang said that the city council was 'heartbroken'. 'What should have been a joyful night of community celebration ended in unimaginable tragedy,' Lang wrote in statement shared by the police department on Monday. 'We mourn the lives lost and stand in deep sorrow with the families whose worlds have been changed forever.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Starmer stoops to pick up UK-US trade agreement papers dropped by Trump MORE: Full list of 29 home goods chain store locations closing this fall amid bankruptcy MORE: Trump launches his own mobile network with a $499 gold phone


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
JK Rowling in bitter spat with Boy George as singer calls her ‘rich bored bully' over trans rights
JK Rowling has blasted Boy George for calling her a 'rich bored bully' – pointing out he once served time for whipping a male escort with a chain. The Harry Potter author posted a furious response on X after the Culture Club singer waded into a spat with another user who claimed Ms Rowling was 'the person maybe most responsible for the push to take away trans rights'. 2 When Ms Rowling asked the X user 'which rights have been taken away from trans people?', Boy George responded: 'The right to be left alone by a rich bored bully!' Ms Rowling posted a lengthy rebuttal in which she accused the Karma Chameleon singer, whose real name is George O'Dowd, of sneering at 'unenlightened plebs' who reject the notion that trans women are women. She added: 'I've never been given 15 months for handcuffing a man to a wall and beating him with a chain.' Boy George was jailed in 2009 for handcuffing an escort to his bed and inflicting 'wholly gratuitous violence' at a property in Shoreditch, east London, in April 2007. The court was told that the cocaine-fuelled attack on Audun Carlsen, a Norwegian man, had been 'premeditated and callous' and had left the victim 'traumatised'. Boy George had been found guilty at an earlier trial of false imprisonment and beating Carlsen with a chain with the help of another man, whom he had never identified. Ms Rowling rejected Boy George's claim that she was entitled. She pointed out that she had been poor and could empathise with women who relied on state-funded services, such as single-sex rape crisis, domestic abuse and homeless shelters. She said: 'You yourself have been convicted of violent assault. The overwhelming number of people who commit crimes of violence are male, just like you.' Ms Rowling has become one of the most outspoken campaigners for women-only spaces, becoming a target for criticism by transgender rights activists. The row broke out months after Supreme Court judges unanimously ruled that a woman is defined by biological sex under equality law.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Revealed: The eight perverted grooming gangs convicted of preying on girls
Since the Daily Mail exposed the scandal of children being groomed for sex by gangs of South Asian men 15 years ago, almost 400 abusers have been brought to justice. In Rochdale alone, eight rings of mainly Pakistani-heritage paedophiles have been convicted of preying on largely white girls in the early 2000s – and a further 20 men are awaiting trial. Recent cases which underline the scale of the scourge in a string of Britain's towns and cities include: THE MARKET STALL GANG Just last Friday, seven men were convicted of sexually exploiting and raping two white schoolgirls in Rochdale. Ringleader Mohammed Zahid, 64, was known as 'Knickerman' because of his underwear stall on Rochdale's centuries-old market. The depraved father-of-three used his business to target children from troubled backgrounds, grooming the pair from when they were just 13. Between 2001 and 2006 they were treated as 'sex slaves', a trial in Manchester heard, with Zahid passing them on to paedophile taxi drivers in return for payment where they were subjected to further abuse. As well as Zahid, Mushtaq Ahmed, 67, Kasir Bashir, 50 – who is on the run after absconding – Mohammed Shahzad, 44, Naheem Akram, 48, Nisar Hussain, 41, and Roheez Khan, 39, all face lengthy prison sentences. THE TAKEAWAY BROTHERS Three brothers who used a 'dingy' flat above a takeaway in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, to groom and abuse underage girls were jailed earlier this year. Shaha Amran Miah, 49, Shaha Alman Miah, 47, and Shaha Joman Miah, 38, were all convicted of a string of sexual offences against teenage girls between 2008 and 2010. They were jailed for a total of 54 years. THE CHILDREN'S HOME GANG Seven men who committed a string of child-sex abuse offences against two teenage girls in Rotherham were jailed for a total of 106 years last September. At times the victims were collected by their abusers from children's homes. Mohammed Amar, 42, Mohammed Siyab, 44, Yasser Ajaibe, 39, Mohammed Sadiq, 49, Abid Saddiq, 43, Tahir Yassin, 38, and Ramin Bari, 37, were handed sentences of between six and 25 years. It brought the number of men to face justice in Operation Stovewood – the largest investigation of its kind undertaken in the UK – to 36. It was launched after the Jay Report found that at least 1,400 girls were abused by gangs of men of mainly Pakistani heritage in Rotherham between 1997 and 2013.