McKinney Daycare Worker Gets 20 Years in Prison for Injuring 8 Infants

January 24, 2020

(McKinney, Texas) Collin County District Attorney Greg Willis announced that Jessica Joy Wiese, 45, of McKinney, will serve 20 years in prison for eight cases of Injury to Child. “This is every parent’s nightmare – you entrust your infant child to someone who instead cruelly harms them behind closed doors,” added Willis.

A jury found Wiese guilty for one of the eight cases after a trial in December 2019, and assessed punishment at the maximum sentence under the law – 10 years in prison. On Wednesday, Wiese pleaded guilty to the remaining seven charges of injury to a child in return for an additional 10 years in prison to be served after the initial jury sentence, for a total sentence of 20 years. After final sentencing, the children’s family members gave victim impact statements – some described the continuing nightmare caused by the abuse, while others extended forgiveness.

Wiese, a former nurse, worked as an infant care provider at the Joyous Montessori Daycare in McKinney, Texas between May 2016 and November 2018. After a parent noticed bruising on her child and received no satisfactory explanation from the daycare, the parent and her pediatrician notified CPS. McKinney Police Detective Aaron Magallanez investigated and reviewed all available daycare surveillance video, which included only the previous two weeks. He discovered that Wiese injured that infant by violently shaking him, ultimately causing three broken bones. Detective Magallanez also discovered seven additional infants Wiese abused while in her care. These children ranged in age from 9 weeks to 14 months. Six of the eight charges were based on video evidence.

All of these infants were evaluated at the Children’s Medical Center’s Referral and Evaluation of At Risk Children (REACH) Clinic. The REACH clinic medical staff is certified and trained in Child Abuse Pediatrics and determined the extent of the injuries. These medical evaluations, along with the video evidence, led to the eight charges of Injury to a Child, all 3rd degree felonies because the injuries did not rise to the level of serious bodily injury as defined in the Texas Penal Code.

Assistant District Attorneys Abigail Policastro and Bobby Huber prosecuted the case, aided by District Attorney Investigator Kim Voigt-Eanes, Victim Assistance Coordinator Casey Hendrix, and Legal Secretary Raman Kaur.

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